Negative Political Identities and Costly Political Action
Negative Political Identities and Costly Political Action
Elite and mass level politics in many Western democracies is increasingly characterised by the expression of negative feelings towards political out-groups. While the existence of these feelings is well-documented, there is little evidence on the consequences of activating political identities during election campaigns. We test whether fundraising emails containing negative or positive political identity cues lead party supporters to donate money via a large pre-registered digital field experiment conducted in collaboration with a British political party. We find that emails containing negative as opposed to positive identity cues lead to a higher number and frequency of donations. We also find that negative identity cues were only effective when paired with an issue identity rather than a traditional party identity cue, resulting in a 15% increase in the probability of donating over the untreated control. Our results provide novel experimental evidence on the behavioural effects of activating identities in real-world political campaigns.
Lawall, Katharina
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Turnbull-Dugarte, Stuart J.
e25c6280-842c-407f-a961-6472eea5d845
Foos, Florian
d9ee0fee-e068-47e0-9583-01b533a85496
Townsley, Joshua
b67ce2e7-3fe6-4483-89da-4e0329f0183e
Lawall, Katharina
58718ea9-6af9-470d-9521-5b28f8c4f846
Turnbull-Dugarte, Stuart J.
e25c6280-842c-407f-a961-6472eea5d845
Foos, Florian
d9ee0fee-e068-47e0-9583-01b533a85496
Townsley, Joshua
b67ce2e7-3fe6-4483-89da-4e0329f0183e
Lawall, Katharina, Turnbull-Dugarte, Stuart J., Foos, Florian and Townsley, Joshua
(2023)
Negative Political Identities and Costly Political Action.
Harvard Dataverse
doi:10.7910/dvn/gzfe22
[Dataset]
Abstract
Elite and mass level politics in many Western democracies is increasingly characterised by the expression of negative feelings towards political out-groups. While the existence of these feelings is well-documented, there is little evidence on the consequences of activating political identities during election campaigns. We test whether fundraising emails containing negative or positive political identity cues lead party supporters to donate money via a large pre-registered digital field experiment conducted in collaboration with a British political party. We find that emails containing negative as opposed to positive identity cues lead to a higher number and frequency of donations. We also find that negative identity cues were only effective when paired with an issue identity rather than a traditional party identity cue, resulting in a 15% increase in the probability of donating over the untreated control. Our results provide novel experimental evidence on the behavioural effects of activating identities in real-world political campaigns.
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Published date: 22 September 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 485963
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485963
PURE UUID: 9ee0a9f1-cef6-4d19-a033-f3b365f40eae
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Date deposited: 04 Jan 2024 06:30
Last modified: 27 Feb 2024 03:07
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Contributors
Creator:
Katharina Lawall
Creator:
Florian Foos
Creator:
Joshua Townsley
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