Self-Affirmation and Identity-Driven Political Behavior

Psychological attachment to political parties can bias people’s attitudes, beliefs, and group evaluations. Studies from psychology suggest that self-affirmation theory may ameliorate this problem in the domain of politics on a variety of outcome measures. We report a series of studies conducted by s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental political science 2022-01, Vol.9 (2), p.225-240
Hauptverfasser: Lyons, Benjamin A., Farhart, Christina E., Hall, Michael P., Kotcher, John, Levendusky, Matthew, Miller, Joanne M., Nyhan, Brendan, Raimi, Kaitlin T., Reifler, Jason, Saunders, Kyle L., Skytte, Rasmus, Zhao, Xiaoquan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Psychological attachment to political parties can bias people’s attitudes, beliefs, and group evaluations. Studies from psychology suggest that self-affirmation theory may ameliorate this problem in the domain of politics on a variety of outcome measures. We report a series of studies conducted by separate research teams that examine whether a self-affirmation intervention affects a variety of outcomes, including political or policy attitudes, factual beliefs, conspiracy beliefs, affective polarization, and evaluations of news sources. The different research teams use a variety of self-affirmation interventions, research designs, and outcomes. Despite these differences, the research teams consistently find that self-affirmation treatments have little effect. These findings suggest considerable caution is warranted for researchers who wish to apply the self-affirmation framework to studies that investigate political attitudes and beliefs. By presenting the “null results” of separate research teams, we hope to spark a discussion about whether and how the self-affirmation paradigm should be applied to political topics.
ISSN:2052-2630
2052-2649
DOI:10.1017/XPS.2020.46