葫芦影

Explained: Political Polarization

Economic Inequality Can Cause It; Reversing It Is Difficult

Political polarization 鈥 the ever-present and growing division between Republicans and Democrats along ideological lines 颅鈥 has a powerful grip on the United States, and a 葫芦影业 researcher has helped explain why, reporting his findings in .

Political Polarization
Political polarization may also explain the emergence of populist and other far-right political movements, according to a new report.

鈥淧olitical polarization is linked to economic inequality, and we have created a mathematical model showing a causal explanation for that link,鈥 said Alexander Stewart, assistant professor of mathematical biology in UH鈥檚 College of Natural Sciences & Mathematics. 鈥淲e also show that once polarization occurs, it can spread rapidly to the whole population and persist even when the conditions that produced it have reversed.鈥

Stewart鈥檚 work offers both a theoretical account and empirical support for the emergence of polarization as a response to economic hardship.

Polarization is a social phenomenon in which a population divides into belligerent groups with rigidly opposed beliefs and identities that inhibit cooperation and undermine pursuit of a common good.

Alexander Stewart
Alexander Stewart, assistant professor of mathematical biology, is reporting the reason that inequality ends up causing polarization is that when people are faced with economic hardship, they become more risk averse and tend to stay within their own groups.

Stewart's models divided people into two groups, based on similarities.

鈥淚n our models, the reason that inequality ends up causing polarization is that when people are faced with economic hardship, they become more risk averse. They prefer to have interactions with their own groups, or 鈥渋ngroups鈥 of people where they have less risk of failure,鈥 said Stewart. This leads to withdrawing interaction with other 鈥渙utgroups鈥 of people who are dissimilar to them, building to an attitude of 'us vs. them.'

Stewart and colleagues also studied the last three presidential election cycles in the United States with data from the American National Election Study and the Cooperative Congressional Election Study.

鈥淓conomic inequality has been rising for the last half of the 20th century, and it has reached heights never before seen in our lifetimes,鈥 said Stewart. 鈥淩ising inequality is sufficient to cause the polarization we see now in public discourse.鈥

That polarization may also explain the emergence of populist and other far-right political movements.

鈥淓conomic stress and fear have shown to be excellent highly localized predictors for the success of a number of populist movements including in the Ukraine as well as the United States and United Kingdom,鈥 reports Stewart.

- Laurie Fickman, University Media Relations

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