Abstract

Citizen exposure to political incivility is increasing. Studies have found heterogeneous responses to incivility, but we know little about what drives this variation. This study investigates whether emotional responses to both civility and incivility are driven by moral value commitments. Drawing on Moral Foundations Theory, we argue that incivility should pose more of a threat to people who embrace an individualizing system of moral regulation than a binding system. To test this, we conduct a 3 × 3 between-subjects survey-embedded vignette experiment with a representative sample of 1,789 U.S. respondents. The vignettes describe interactions between two candidates in a debate. The findings show that respondents clearly distinguish between civil, neutral, and uncivil debate and that these conditions yield distinct emotional responses. Moreover, we show “individualizers” have a stronger emotional response to incivility than “binders.” Responses to civility, however, appear to be unaffected by moral value commitments.

Highlights

  • Citizen exposure to political incivility is increasing

  • Political incivility is on the rise in the United States and the public has noticed

  • We draw on Moral Foundations Theory (MFT) to determine how respondent preferences for certain systems of moral regulation shape emotional responses to incivility and civility

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Summary

How Moral Value Commitments Shape Responses to Political Civility and Incivility

Annemarie Walter (School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham & School of Governance, Law and Urban Development, Saxion University of Applied Sciences).

Research Design and Operationalization of Concepts
Results
Conclusion
Findings
Binding foundations
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