
Published online:
21 September 2023
Published in print:
03 April 2023
Online ISBN:
9780226824697
Print ISBN:
9780226824680
Contents
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Do Cross-Party Friendships Mitigate Partisan Animus? Do Cross-Party Friendships Mitigate Partisan Animus?
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An Experimental Test of the Effects of Cross-Party Friendships An Experimental Test of the Effects of Cross-Party Friendships
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Did Subjects Comply with the Treatment? Did Subjects Comply with the Treatment?
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Who are These Cross-Party Friends? Who are These Cross-Party Friends?
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Do these Friendships Lessen Animus? Do these Friendships Lessen Animus?
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What Explains These Effects? What Explains These Effects?
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Appendix: Regression Results from This Chapter Appendix: Regression Results from This Chapter
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Chapter
4 Why Can’t We Be Friends: Can Cross-Party Friendships Mitigate Affective Polarization?
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Pages
79–103
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Published:April 2023
Cite
OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE
Levendusky, Matthew, and Matthew Levendusky, 'Why Can’t We Be Friends: Can Cross-Party Friendships Mitigate Affective Polarization?', Our Common Bonds: Using What Americans Share to Help Bridge the Partisan Divide (Chicago, IL , 2023; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2023), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226824697.003.0004, accessed 15 May 2025.
CHICAGO STYLE
Levendusky, Matthew, and Matthew Levendusky. "Why Can’t We Be Friends: Can Cross-Party Friendships Mitigate Affective Polarization?." In Our Common Bonds: Using What Americans Share to Help Bridge the Partisan Divide University of Chicago Press, 2023. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2023. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226824697.003.0004.
Abstract
This chapter explores where cross-party friendships can help to bridge the partisan divide. Using both observational and experimental data, it shows that most Americans—more than 8 in 10—do have friendships that cross the partisan divide. Further, these friendships do work to reduce partisan animosity, by changing the mental picture individuals hold of the other party: it is not simply disliked political opponents, but it instead contains their friends and family members as well.
Keywords:
inter-group friendship, cross-party friendship, social networks, partisan divide, animosity
Subject
US Politics
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