展示力量:抗议信号如何影响政治代表的意见形成

Demonstrating Power

American Sociological Review · 2017
被引 146
FT 50ABS 4★

中文导读

通过对比利时政治家的实验,研究抗议活动的四个特征(价值、团结、规模、承诺)如何影响他们对议题的重视程度、立场和行动意图,发现规模和团结最具说服力。

Abstract

How do public opinion signals affect political representatives’ opinion formation? To date, we have only limited knowledge about this essential representative process. In this article, we theorize and examine the signaling strength of one type of societal signal: protest. We do so by means of an innovative experiment conducted among Belgian national and regional politicians. Elected officials were exposed to manipulated television news items covering a protest demonstration. Following Tilly’s previously untested WUNC claim, four features of the event were manipulated: the demonstrators’ worthiness, unity, numerical strength, and commitment. We argue that these protest features present elected officials with useful cues about what (a segment of) the public wants. We find that these cues affect elected officials’ beliefs. The salience they attach to the protest issue, the position they take, and their intended actions all change as a consequence of exposure. The size of a protest event (numbers) and whether the protesters agree among themselves (unity) are the most persuasive protest factors. The effects of the protest signals come on top of strong receiver effects. We find no evidence that elected officials’ predispositions moderate the effects of the protest features.

政治学公共舆论社会运动政治心理学传播学