Baldassarri Delia, Gelman Andrew
Princeton University.
Columbia University.
AJS. 2008 Jan 28;114(2):408-446. doi: 10.2139/ssrn.1010098.
Public opinion polarization is here conceived as a process of alignment along multiple lines of potential disagreement and measured as growing constraint in individuals' preferences. Using NES data from 1972 to 2004, the authors model trends in issue partisanship-the correlation of issue attitudes with party identification-and issue alignment-the correlation between pairs of issues-and find a substantive increase in issue partisanship, but little evidence of issue alignment. The findings suggest that opinion changes correspond more to a resorting of party labels among voters than to greater constraint on issue attitudes: since parties are more polarized, they are now better at sorting individuals along ideological lines. Levels of constraint vary across population subgroups: strong partisans and wealthier and politically sophisticated voters have grown more coherent in their beliefs. The authors discuss the consequences of partisan realignment and group sorting on the political process and potential deviations from the classic pluralistic account of American politics.
舆论两极分化在这里被视为一个沿着多条潜在分歧线进行站队的过程,并被衡量为个人偏好中日益增加的约束。作者利用1972年至2004年的美国全国选举研究(NES)数据,对议题党派性(议题态度与政党认同之间的相关性)和议题一致性(议题对之间的相关性)的趋势进行建模,发现议题党派性有实质性增加,但几乎没有议题一致性的证据。研究结果表明,舆论变化更多地对应于选民中政党标签的重新排列,而不是对议题态度的更大约束:由于政党更加两极分化,它们现在更善于按照意识形态路线对个人进行分类。约束程度在不同人口亚群体中有所不同:坚定的党派人士、富人和政治上成熟的选民在信念上变得更加一致。作者讨论了党派重新排列和群体分类对政治进程的影响以及与美国政治经典多元主义解释的潜在偏差。