Publication | Closed Access
The Limits of Partisan Prejudice
296
Citations
67
References
2016
Year
Racial PrejudicePolitical ProcessPublic OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesPartisan PrejudiceBiasPolitical SciencePolitical CommunicationPrejudiceUnconscious BiasPolitical CognitionMajority InfluencePolitical PartiesAmerican PoliticsHate SpeechSocial BiasHostile RhetoricPolitical AttitudesAffective PolarizationArtsPersuasion
Partisanship increasingly factors into the behavior of Americans in both political and nonpolitical situations, yet the bounds of partisan prejudice are largely unknown. In this paper, we systematically evaluate the limits of partisan prejudice using a series of five studies situated within a typology of prejudice. We find that partisan prejudice predicts suppression of hostile rhetoric toward one’s own party, avoidance of members of the opposition, and a desire for preferential treatment for one’s own party. While these behaviors may cause incidental or indirect harm to the opposition, we find that even the most affectively polarized—those with the strongest disdain for the opposition—are no more likely to intentionally harm the opposition than those with minimal levels of affective polarization.
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