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Does Partisanship Affect Compliance with Government Recommendations?
This article studies the role of partisanship in American’s willingness to follow government recommendations. I combine survey and behavioral data to examine partisans’ vaccination rates during the Bush and Obama administrations. I find that presidential co-partisans are more likely to believe that...
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Published in: | Political behavior 2021-03, Vol.43 (1), p.451-472 |
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container_title | Political behavior |
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creator | Krupenkin, Masha |
description | This article studies the role of partisanship in American’s willingness to follow government recommendations. I combine survey and behavioral data to examine partisans’ vaccination rates during the Bush and Obama administrations. I find that presidential co-partisans are more likely to believe that vaccines are safe and more likely to vaccinate themselves and their children than presidential out-partisans. Depending on the vaccine, presidential co-partisans are 4–10 percentage points more likely to vaccinate than presidential out-partisans. Using causal mediation analysis, I find that this effect is the result of partisans’ differing levels of trust in government. This finding sheds light on the far-reaching role of partisanship in Americans’ interactions with the federal government. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s11109-020-09613-6 |
format | article |
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subjects | Federal government Immunization ORIGINAL PAPER Partisanship Political Science Political Science and International Relations Political Science and International Studies Presidents Sociology |
title | Does Partisanship Affect Compliance with Government Recommendations? |
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