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What drives the polarisation and moderation of opinions? Evidence from a Finnish citizen deliberation experiment on immigration
Authors:MARINA LINDELL  ANDRÉ BÄCHTIGER  KIMMO GRÖNLUND  KAISA HERNE  MAIJA SETÄLÄ  DOMINIK WYSS
Institution:1. Social Science Research Institute, ?bo Akademi University, Finland;2. Institute of Social Sciences, University of Stuttgart, Germany;3. School of Management, Politics, University of Tampere, Finland;4. Department of Philosophy, Contemporary History and Political Science, University of Turku, Finland
Abstract:In the study of deliberation, a largely under‐explored area is why some participants polarise their opinion after deliberation and why others moderate them. Opinion polarisation is usually considered a suspicious outcome of deliberation, while moderation is seen as a desirable one. This article takes issue with this view. Results from a Finnish deliberative experiment on immigration show that polarisers and moderators were not different in socioeconomic, cognitive or affective profiles. Moreover, both polarisation and moderation can entail deliberatively desired pathways: in the experiment, both polarisers and moderators learned during deliberation, levels of empathy were fairly high on both sides, and group pressures barely mattered. Finally, the low physical presence of immigrants in some discussion groups was associated with polarisation in the anti‐immigrant direction, bolstering longstanding claims regarding the importance of presence for democratic politics.
Keywords:enclave deliberation  deliberative democracy  opinion polarisation  opinion change  immigration attitudes
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