Lectures and conversations

Can invoking gay rights normalize exclusionary attitudes?


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Portrettfoto av Lise Bjånesøy
Photo: Eivind Senneset

Lise Bjånesøy, postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Government, will hold a presentation about how invoking gay can rights normalize exclusionary attitudes.

Lise Bjånesøy is a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Government. In this presentation, Lise presents vignette experiments fielded in five European countries, investigating if framing an issue as protecting gay rights can lead to higher tolerance for radical right-wing positions in her presentation called "Can invoking gay rights normalize exclusionary attitudes?".

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

How do radical-right wing positions become normalized? This paper investigates if framing an issue as protecting gay rights can lead to higher tolerance for radical right-wing positions. We test this by conducting large-scale, pre-registered vignette experiments across five European countries. In the experiment, we vary the following things: whether an anti-Islam position is presented through a gay rights frame, if the sender of the message is in a same-sex relationship, and the gender and party affiliation of the sender. We find that gay rights frames significantly boost tolerance and support for anti-Islam positions. Who delivers the gay rights message is less important: even politicians in different-sex relationships benefit from invoking gay rights to normalise anti-Islam views. 
These results showcase the potency of invoking liberal values as a cheap normalisation strategy. Political actors can use liberal values like gay rights to normalise exclusionary ideas, even without any signals of substantive or symbolic commitment to the underlying liberal value.