Does Relational Polarization Entail Ideological Polarization? The Case of the 2017 Norwegian Election Campaign on Twitter

Authors

  • Bernard Enjolras Research Professor, Institutt for samfunnsforskning (Institute for social research) Oslo, Norway

Keywords:

polarization, social media, Twitter, echo chambers, Norway, election campaign, homophily

Abstract

This article investigates different polarizing mechanisms—relational homophily and ideological partisanship—characterizing political communications using Twitter data collected during the 2017 Norwegian election. By combining two computational approches—partition-specific network analysis and quantitative analysis of language polarization—we can examine the linkages between the structure of interactions and political polarization. The results show that the Norwegian political Twittersphere is not made of isolated echo chambers but is structured around crosscutting communities of interaction. There are no signs that communities with higher degrees of polarization are the ones that display higher degrees of homophily. Yet, the degree of ideological polarization differs across communities and topics. Some topics, such as political hate and far right and economy and taxes, are more polarized than others.

Author Biography

Bernard Enjolras, Research Professor, Institutt for samfunnsforskning (Institute for social research) Oslo, Norway

Research Professor, Director of the Center for Research on Civil Society

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Published

2023-03-13

Issue

Section

Articles