Lectures and conversations

Acceptability of Politicians’ Uncivil Behavior in a High-Trust Society


Corentin Poyet, associate professor at the Department of Government, will hold a presentation about acceptability of politicians’ uncivil behavior in a high-trust society.

Corentin Poyet is an associate professor at the Department of Government. Linking social psychology and political behavior literature, Corentin will present results from a survey experiment set in Norway's high-trust, multiparty setting in his presentation "'It may be difficult for a scumbag like you to understand!' Acceptability of Politicians’ Uncivil Behavior in a High-Trust Society". 

Light lunch will be served, as first come, first served.

The event is hybrid, if you can not join us in the Corner room at Sofie Lindstrøms hus, you can join us digitally. (external link)

Welcome!

Abstract

The paper explores citizens’ tolerance for politicians’ uncivil behavior in Norway’s high-trust, multiparty setting. It links social psychology and political behavior literature to argue that the acceptability of uncivil acts depends on the context, particularly on who the offender and the victim are, and how people relate to them. Using a 2x2x3 survey experiment, we find that incivility is mostly condemned. However, party loyalty and issue agreement slightly increase tolerance, mainly among supporters of the Progress Party. Additionally, identification with the victim lowers acceptance, especially among women when the victim is female. The results indicate that context and homophily matter, but uncivil political rhetoric remains largely unacceptable and can weaken cross-group solidarity, ultimately raising affective polarization.