000 01803nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c514532
_d514532
008 201112b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aPosta, Daniel Della.
_920989
245 _aPluralistic collapse: The “oil spill” model of mass opinion polarization
260 _aAmerican Sociological Review
300 _a 85(3), Jun, 2020: p.507-536
520 _aDespite widespread feeling that public opinion in the United States has become dramatically polarized along political lines, empirical support for such a pattern is surprisingly elusive. Reporting little evidence of mass polarization, previous studies assume polarization is evidenced via the amplification of existing political alignments. This article considers a different pathway: polarization occurring via social, cultural, and political alignments coming to encompass an increasingly diverse array of opinions and attitudes. The study uses 44 years of data from the General Social Survey representing opinions and attitudes across a wide array of domains as elements in an evolving belief network. Analyses of this network produce evidence that mass polarization has increased via a process of belief consolidation, entailing the collapse of previously cross-cutting alignments, thus creating increasingly broad and encompassing clusters organized around cohesive packages of beliefs. Further, the increasing salience of political ideology and partisanship only partly explains this trend. The structure of U.S. opinion has shifted in ways suggesting troubling implications for proponents of political and social pluralism.- Reproduced
650 _aPolitical polarization, Public opinion, Belief networks, Political pluralism
_919258
773 _aAmerican Sociological Review
906 _aPOLITICAL POLARIZATION
942 _cAR