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Mass polarization is one of the defining features of politics in the twenty-first century, but efforts to understand its causes and effects are often hindered by empirical challenges related to measurement and data availability. To address these challenges and provide a common standard of analysis for researchers, this Element presents the Polarization in Comparative Attitudes Project (PolarCAP). PolarCAP clearly defines polarization as a property of group relations and uses a Bayesian measurement model to estimate smooth panels of ideological and affective polarization across ninety-two countries and forty-nine years. The author uses these data to provide a descriptive account of mass polarization across time and space. They further show how PolarCAP facilitates substantive inference by applying it to three sets of variables often hypothesized as causes or consequences of polarization: institutional design, economic crisis, and democracy. Open-source software makes PolarCAP easily accessible to scholars and practitioners.
Sommario
1. Mass Polarization in Comparative Politics: Concepts and Challenges; 2. Estimating Country-Year Panels of Mass Polarization; 3. Polarization across Time and Space: Descriptive Analyses; 4. Correlates of Mass Polarization; 5. Advancing the Scientific Study of Polarization; References.
Riassunto
This Element presents the Polarization in Comparative Attitudes Project (PolarCAP). PolarCAP clearly defines polarization as a property of group relations and uses a Bayesian measurement model to estimate smooth panels of ideological and affective polarization across ninety-two countries and forty-nine years.
Prefazione
This Element develops, presents, and validates a new dataset of mass polarization across 92 countries and 49 years.