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- Title
Partisan Stereotypes and Policy Attitudes.
- Authors
Bergan, Daniel E.
- Abstract
Drawing from the literature on expectancy violations (A. H. Eagly, W. Wood, & S. Chaiken, 1978) and recent work on stereotypes (J. T. Crawford, L. Jussim, S. Madon, T. R. Cain, & S. T. Stevens, 2011), we predict that party labels influence attitudes when they provide unexpected information. We predict that party labels will increase support for the relevant policy when attached to unexpected policies and will have no effect when attached to policies already associated with the party. Party labels operate as hypothesized by prior work, increasing support among identifiers of the party endorsing the policy and decreasing support among members of the opposite party, when there are no expectations about the party's position on the policy. In a series of 3 experiments, we find empirical support for each these predictions.
- Subjects
PARTISANSHIP; STEREOTYPES; GOVERNMENT policy; ATTITUDE (Psychology); POLITICAL parties; POLITICAL planning; EXPERIMENTS; SELF-interest; PREJUDICES; LIBERALISM; CONSERVATISM
- Publication
Journal of Communication, 2012, Vol 62, Issue 6, p1102
- ISSN
0021-9916
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1460-2466.2012.01676.x