How digital media drive affective polarization through partisan sorting
University of Neuchâtel · University of Amsterdam
Abstract
Politics has in recent decades entered an era of intense polarization. Explanations have implicated digital media, with the so-called echo chamber remaining a dominant causal hypothesis despite growing challenge by empirical evidence. This paper suggests that this mounting evidence provides not only reason to reject the echo chamber hypothesis but also the foundation for an alternative causal mechanism. To propose such a mechanism, the paper draws on the literatures on affective polarization, digital media, and opinion dynamics. From the affective polarization literature, we follow the move from seeing polarization as diverging issue positions to rooted in sorting: an alignment of differences which is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 108
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Polarization (electrochemistry)
- Digital media
- Politics
- Social psychology
- Sociology
- Political science
- Psychology
- Law