How local partisan context conditions prosocial behaviors: Mask wearing during COVID-19

Does local partisan context influence the adoption of prosocial behavior? Using a nationwide survey of 60,000 adults and geographic data on over 180 million registered voters, we investigate whether neighborhood partisan composition affects a publicly observable and politicized behavior: wearing a m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2022-05, Vol.119 (21), p.e2116311119
Hauptverfasser: Baxter-King, Ryan, Brown, Jacob R, Enos, Ryan D, Naeim, Arash, Vavreck, Lynn
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container_issue 21
container_start_page e2116311119
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Baxter-King, Ryan
Brown, Jacob R
Enos, Ryan D
Naeim, Arash
Vavreck, Lynn
description Does local partisan context influence the adoption of prosocial behavior? Using a nationwide survey of 60,000 adults and geographic data on over 180 million registered voters, we investigate whether neighborhood partisan composition affects a publicly observable and politicized behavior: wearing a mask. We find that Republicans are less likely to wear masks in public as the share of Republicans in their zip codes increases. Democratic mask wearing, however, is unaffected by local partisan context. Consequently, the partisan gap in mask wearing is largest in Republican neighborhoods, and less apparent in Democratic areas. These effects are distinct from other contextual effects such as variations in neighborhood race, income, or education. In contrast, partisan context has significantly reduced influence on unobservable public health recommendations like COVID-19 vaccination and no influence on nonpoliticized behaviors like flu vaccination, suggesting that differences in mask wearing reflect the publicly observable and politicized nature of the behavior instead of underlying differences in dispositions toward medical care.
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subjects Altruism
Behavior
Context
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
COVID-19 - prevention & control
COVID-19 Vaccines
Humans
Immunization
Masks
Mass Behavior
Politics
Public health
Social Sciences
United States
Vaccination
Vaccination - psychology
title How local partisan context conditions prosocial behaviors: Mask wearing during COVID-19
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