Social Identity, Political Speech, and Electoral Competition

Much research in political science suggests that social identity can be an important factor in motivating behavior. If voters care about social identity, when will politicians find it in their interests to make group-based appeals? Do social identity concerns affect the policy platforms offered by c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of theoretical politics 2006-01, Vol.18 (1), p.5-39
Hauptverfasser: Dickson, Eric S., Scheve, Kenneth
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description Much research in political science suggests that social identity can be an important factor in motivating behavior. If voters care about social identity, when will politicians find it in their interests to make group-based appeals? Do social identity concerns affect the policy platforms offered by candidates? In a model of political speech and electoral competition, in which voters care about both social identities and policy, we demonstrate that social identity concerns can lead to platform divergence even when the policy dimension is uncorrelated with identity. For example, policy-motivated politicians can employ identity rhetoric to obtain ‘slack’ in the policy dimension. Further, the need for candidates to resort to group-based appeals depends on such factors as the relative sizes of social groups; the policy preferences of group members; whether candidates care about policy and if so, their preferred policies; and the extent of individual identification with groups. The analysis demonstrates that social identity can have a striking impact on the strategic conduct of campaigns.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0951629806059594
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subjects Candidates
Competition
Elections
Electoral campaigning
Ethnicity
Government Policy
Minority & ethnic groups
Platform
Political Campaigns
Political theory
Politics
Preferences
Rhetoric
Social Identity
Voters
Voting Behavior
title Social Identity, Political Speech, and Electoral Competition
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