School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9SS, United Kingdom;
Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Dec 14;118(50). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2102140118.
The form of political polarization where citizens develop strongly negative attitudes toward out-party members and policies has become increasingly prominent across many democracies. Economic hardship and social inequality, as well as intergroup and racial conflict, have been identified as important contributing factors to this phenomenon known as "affective polarization." Research shows that partisan animosities are exacerbated when these interests and identities become aligned with existing party cleavages. In this paper, we use a model of cultural evolution to study how these forces combine to generate and maintain affective political polarization. We show that economic events can drive both affective polarization and the sorting of group identities along party lines, which, in turn, can magnify the effects of underlying inequality between those groups. But, on a more optimistic note, we show that sufficiently high levels of wealth redistribution through the provision of public goods can counteract this feedback and limit the rise of polarization. We test some of our key theoretical predictions using survey data on intergroup polarization, sorting of racial groups, and affective polarization in the United States over the past 50 y.
政治极化的一种形式是,公民对其他党派成员和政策形成强烈的负面态度,这种现象在许多民主国家变得越来越突出。经济困难和社会不平等,以及群体间和种族冲突,被认为是这种被称为“情感极化”现象的重要促成因素。研究表明,当这些利益和身份与现有党派分歧一致时,党派敌意会加剧。在本文中,我们使用文化进化模型来研究这些力量如何结合起来产生和维持情感政治极化。我们表明,经济事件既可以驱动情感极化,也可以沿着党派路线对群体身份进行分类,而这反过来又会放大这些群体之间潜在不平等的影响。但更乐观的是,我们表明,通过提供公共产品进行足够高的财富再分配,可以抵消这种反馈,并限制极化的上升。我们使用过去 50 年来美国关于群体间极化、种族群体分类和情感极化的调查数据,检验了我们的一些关键理论预测。