Zschau Toralf Tony, Lee Hosuk, Miller Jason
Department of Sociology & Human Services, University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, GA 30597, USA.
Institute for Environmental & Spatial Analysis (IESA), University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, GA 30597, USA.
Behav Sci (Basel). 2025 Jun 19;15(6):835. doi: 10.3390/bs15060835.
Political polarization in the United States has made conversations across ideological divides increasingly difficult to navigate. This study explores how students at a regional university in the southern U.S. experience and manage these challenges. Based on in-depth interviews with 30 students from diverse social and political backgrounds, we identify four key conversational strategies: disengagement, negotiation, context adaptation, and information processing. Rather than viewing these as surface-level techniques, we argue they represent deeper identity management processes aimed at reducing the social and cognitive risks of political disagreement. Drawing on Self-Categorization Theory and Identity Control Theory, we show how these strategies reflect efforts to maintain identity coherence and manage relational stakes when political identity becomes salient. Our findings suggest that while these strategies may help students avoid conflict in the moment, they may also limit deeper engagement across divides. We conclude by discussing the implications of these findings for dialog practice, highlighting the importance of fostering tolerance for identity discomfort and helping students rediscover the common bonds that unite them across political differences.
美国的政治两极分化使得跨越意识形态分歧的对话越来越难以进行。本研究探讨了美国南部一所地区性大学的学生如何体验和应对这些挑战。基于对30名来自不同社会和政治背景的学生的深入访谈,我们确定了四种关键的对话策略:脱离接触、协商、情境适应和信息处理。我们认为,这些策略并非表面的技巧,而是代表了更深层次的身份管理过程,旨在降低政治分歧带来的社会和认知风险。借鉴自我分类理论和身份控制理论,我们展示了这些策略如何反映出在政治身份变得突出时,为保持身份一致性和管理关系 stakes 所做的努力。我们的研究结果表明,虽然这些策略可能有助于学生暂时避免冲突,但它们也可能限制跨分歧的更深入参与。我们通过讨论这些发现对对话实践的影响来得出结论,强调培养对身份不适的容忍度以及帮助学生重新发现跨越政治差异将他们团结在一起的共同纽带的重要性。