政治暴力事件中的党派偏见

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE American Politics Research Pub Date : 2024-03-28 DOI:10.1177/1532673x241236198
Justin Michael Zyla
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引用次数: 0

摘要

设想两起政治暴力事件。在第一起事件中,你与受害者的政治派别相同。在第二起事件中,他们属于对立党派。这种微小的变化--一个标签的改变、一个词的不同--会如何影响您的反应?本文通过一项实验提供了实证见解:美国参与者阅读了一则模拟的大学争论事件:一名学生向一名教授发出死亡威胁,并对其进行诽谤。实验中,肇事者是将该教授描述为民主党人、共和党人,还是使用了其他非描述性(如 "政治")形容词,处理方式各不相同。处理后的调查会测量受访者的离散情绪、他们希望该学生受到的惩罚以及他们的党派团体认同强度。阅读了针对党派受害者的暴力事件的受试者,其所希望的惩罚力度在统计学上有显著增加。但是,针对党外受害者的暴力行为则与对照组相同,受试者的反应就好像他们不知道相关人员的政治派别一样。治疗后的测量结果还表明,焦虑(而非愤怒或党派力量)有可能调解这种潜在的党派偏见。
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Partisan Bias in Episodes of Political Violence
Imagine two incidents of political violence. In the first, you share political affiliation with the victim. In the second, they reside in the opposite party. How would this minor change – a shifting label, the difference of a word – impact your reaction? This article offers empirical insight through an experiment: U.S. participants read a mock college controversy, where a student sent death threats to, and doxed, a professor. The treatment varied whether the perpetrator described the professor as a Democrat, Republican, or used otherwise non-descript (e.g., “political”) adjectives. A posttreatment survey then measured respondents’ discrete emotions, the penalties they preferred the student receive, and their partisan group identity strength. Participants who read about violence against a copartisan victim showed a statistically significant increase in preferred penalty severity. But violence against an outparty victim mirrored the control, with subjects reacting as if they didn’t know the political affiliation of anyone involved. Posttreatment measures also demonstrated the potential for anxiety (but not anger or partisan strength) to mediate this underlying partisan bias.
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来源期刊
American Politics Research
American Politics Research POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
66
期刊介绍: The purpose of Amercian Politics Research is to promote and disseminate high-quality research in all areas of American politics, including local, state, and national. American Politics Research will publish significant studies concerning American political behavior, political parties, public opinion, legislative behavior, courts and the legal process, executive and administrative politics, public policy, and all other topics appropriate to our understanding of American government and politics. Manuscripts from all social science disciplines are welcomed.
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