2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9221.2007.00599.x
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Party Identification in Emotional and Political Context: A Replication

Abstract: While testing an affective measure of party identification Burden and Klofstad (2005) found that using the phrase, "feel that you are," in place of, "think of yourself as," significantly shifted PID in a Republican direction. I adopt the theoretical framework of Affective Intelligence (Marcus, Neuman, & MacKuen, 2000) to specify how the timing of their question-wording experiment may have influenced the results. I suggest that the outcome was a function of (a) anxiety present during the survey, which ran just … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…In the U.S., there is conflicting evidence on whether or not this wording makes a difference. Burden and Klfostad (2005) find that it does and regard the ''feel'' question as a more accurate measure of partisanship whereas Neely (2007) finds it makes no difference. At a minimum, it is important to ask the same stem partisanship question across contexts to standardize the measurement of partisan identity.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In the U.S., there is conflicting evidence on whether or not this wording makes a difference. Burden and Klfostad (2005) find that it does and regard the ''feel'' question as a more accurate measure of partisanship whereas Neely (2007) finds it makes no difference. At a minimum, it is important to ask the same stem partisanship question across contexts to standardize the measurement of partisan identity.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…It may also be able to account for the observed generational differences, given that the discursive association between women and the Labour Party is a more recent phenomenon than the parallel costereotyping between women and the Democratic Party. Finally, the fact that Neely (2007) could replicate Burden and Klofstad's experiment, but not their results in a survey a few years later, tends to support the conclusion that these experimental effects are driven by the external context rather than being inherent in the responses of either men or women.…”
Section: Summary and Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…These findings extend extant research in two important ways. First of all, they provide additional evidence of the need to distinguish between the instrumental and affective components of party identification [ 16 17 , 31 ]. Hence, we find distinct effects among party identifiers who do not show signs of affective reactions to their party relative to those identifiers who do display strong affective reactions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, knowledge about the measurement problems relating to an exclusive reliance on self-reported answers has grown exponentially in recent decades [ 13 – 15 ]. These problems are also evident in the context of self-reported measures of party identification [ 16 17 ]. While the party identification measure was designed to gauge “the individual’s affective orientation” towards a party (p. 121 in [ 7 ], our emphasis), recent research has demonstrated that the measure is conflated because it also taps a number of instrumental considerations [ 16 – 18 ]—in particular, the proximity between the voter’s general preferences and the party’s overall positions [ 19 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%