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The Effect of Conspiratorial Thinking and Motivated Reasoning on Belief in Election Fraud
by
Alduncin, Alexander
, Krewson, Christopher
, Edelson, Jack
, Sieja, James A.
, Uscinski, Joseph E.
in
Beliefs
/ Bribery
/ Congressional elections
/ Conspiracy
/ Elections
/ Elites
/ Fraud
/ Identification
/ Individual differences
/ Motivated reasoning
/ Partisanship
/ Party identification
/ Political parties
/ Polls & surveys
/ Presidential elections
/ Reasoning
/ Rhetoric
/ Voter fraud
/ Voters
2017
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The Effect of Conspiratorial Thinking and Motivated Reasoning on Belief in Election Fraud
by
Alduncin, Alexander
, Krewson, Christopher
, Edelson, Jack
, Sieja, James A.
, Uscinski, Joseph E.
in
Beliefs
/ Bribery
/ Congressional elections
/ Conspiracy
/ Elections
/ Elites
/ Fraud
/ Identification
/ Individual differences
/ Motivated reasoning
/ Partisanship
/ Party identification
/ Political parties
/ Polls & surveys
/ Presidential elections
/ Reasoning
/ Rhetoric
/ Voter fraud
/ Voters
2017
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
The Effect of Conspiratorial Thinking and Motivated Reasoning on Belief in Election Fraud
by
Alduncin, Alexander
, Krewson, Christopher
, Edelson, Jack
, Sieja, James A.
, Uscinski, Joseph E.
in
Beliefs
/ Bribery
/ Congressional elections
/ Conspiracy
/ Elections
/ Elites
/ Fraud
/ Identification
/ Individual differences
/ Motivated reasoning
/ Partisanship
/ Party identification
/ Political parties
/ Polls & surveys
/ Presidential elections
/ Reasoning
/ Rhetoric
/ Voter fraud
/ Voters
2017
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The Effect of Conspiratorial Thinking and Motivated Reasoning on Belief in Election Fraud
Journal Article
The Effect of Conspiratorial Thinking and Motivated Reasoning on Belief in Election Fraud
2017
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Overview
Belief in electoral fraud has received heightened attention due to elite rhetoric and controversial voter identification (ID) laws. Using a two-wave national survey administered before and after the 2012 election, we examine the individual-level correlates of belief in a range of election-related conspiracy theories. Our data show that partisanship affects the timing and content of belief in election-related conspiracy theories, but a general disposition toward conspiratorial thinking strongly influences those beliefs. Support for voter ID laws, in contrast, appears to be driven largely by party identification through elite-mass linkages. Our analysis suggests that belief in election fraud is a common and predictable consequence of both underlying conspiratorial thinking and motivated partisan reasoning.
Publisher
SAGE Publishing,SAGE Publications,SAGE PUBLICATIONS, INC
Subject
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