Journal
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Volume 46, Issue 4, Pages 838-855Publisher
UNIV WISCONSIN PRESS
DOI: 10.2307/3088437
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This study advances our understanding of cross-pressures, a concept recognized in the earliest studies of American voting, but for which empirical evidence and theoretical development has been sorely lacking. Although the current consensus suggests that political cross-pressures are of little, if any, consequence for political participation, I find that people whose networks involve greater political disagreement are less likely to participate in politics. Two social psychological processes are suggested to account for this effect. First, those embedded in cross-cutting social and political networks are, as a consequence, more likely to hold ambivalent political views, which in turn discourage political involvement, Second, social accountability pressures in crosscutting networks discourage political participation; the inherently controversial nature of politics is perceived to pose threats to the harmony of social relationships.
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