The Informational Role of Political Parties in Citizens Opinion Formation
Citizens’ opinions about public policy lies at the heart of democracy. A long-standing, but little researched, claim in political science is that political parties provide a vital informational basis that citizens can use to infor...
ver más
¿Tienes un proyecto y buscas un partner? Gracias a nuestro motor inteligente podemos recomendarte los mejores socios y ponerte en contacto con ellos. Te lo explicamos en este video
Proyectos interesantes
PGC2018-096081-A-I00
¿DEMOCRACIA POR REFERENDUM? OPINION PUBLICA Y VOTO EN PERSPE...
18K€
Cerrado
MULTIREP
Multidimensional Representation: Enabling An Alternative Res...
1M€
Cerrado
INFOTRUST
INFOTRUST: Promoting Democratic Engagement by Understanding...
Cerrado
INTRAPOL
Intra-party politics in the past and the present
2M€
Cerrado
EUDEMOS
Constrained Democracy Citizens Responses to Limited Politi...
2M€
Cerrado
Duración del proyecto: 77 meses
Fecha Inicio: 2020-02-27
Fecha Fin: 2026-07-31
Líder del proyecto
AARHUS UNIVERSITET
No se ha especificado una descripción o un objeto social para esta compañía.
TRL
4-5
Presupuesto del proyecto
2M€
Fecha límite de participación
Sin fecha límite de participación.
Descripción del proyecto
Citizens’ opinions about public policy lies at the heart of democracy. A long-standing, but little researched, claim in political science is that political parties provide a vital informational basis that citizens can use to inform their policy opinions. However, current literature shows the opposite: Parties distort citizens’ decision-making and make them dogmatic defenders of their party without caring about policy substance. Therefore, we lack a theory of how – or even if – parties can provide policy information citizens use to inform their opinions.
This project advances a new research agenda to examine the informational role of political parties in citizens’ opinion formation. The project is not only pioneering in developing a novel theoretical model of when and how citizens use parties to inform their opinions; it also breaks new ground methodologically by combining experiments with a cross-national design. The project is unique in that it integrates macro-level party characteristics with micro-level opinion formation, helping scholars ask new questions and seek novel answers to how parties affect citizens’ opinions.
As key empirical contribution, the project will develop a new survey instrument to offer the first mapping of how citizens view parties’ policy reputations; develop and use new measures of citizens’ policy reasoning; conduct a series of innovative survey experiments across party systems to obtain generalizable causal estimates of when and how parties inform opinions across individuals, parties and countries in Western Europe; and implement a panel survey to track how parties inform opinions during a real-world debate.
The project will significantly improve our understanding the relationship between citizens and political parties. Timely and innovative, the project will answer how current transformations of party systems affect citizens’ ability to participate meaningfully in democracy, and if parties still play a role in that process.