From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism

Current sociological theories attribute the recent surge in political extremism to mechanisms of opinion “homophily” (i.e., like-minded individuals interact more while dissimilar ones might distance) and “assimilation (i.e., interactions homogenize opinions),” which collectively suggest a social wor...

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Main Author: Liang, Chen E.
Other Authors: Reagans, Ray
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2024
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/157090
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author Liang, Chen E.
author2 Reagans, Ray
author_facet Reagans, Ray
Liang, Chen E.
author_sort Liang, Chen E.
collection MIT
description Current sociological theories attribute the recent surge in political extremism to mechanisms of opinion “homophily” (i.e., like-minded individuals interact more while dissimilar ones might distance) and “assimilation (i.e., interactions homogenize opinions),” which collectively suggest a social world dominated by extreme views. Yet, this view contradicts empirical evidence showing that extremists still represent a minority and individual opinions remain largely stable. We resolve this apparent paradox by illustrating how extreme collective action can arise from a moderate majority that retains moderate opinions yet responds positively to recruitment by extremists. We break down this task into three steps. First, we theoretically distinguish between opinion homophily and identity homophily (i.e., individuals who share the same identity interact more). Second, we develop an agent-based model to manipulate the strength of identity homophily relative to opinion homophily, while excluding the effect of assimilation (i.e., holding opinions constant). Our model reveals that strong identity-based tolerance can create a “radicalized” structure, which allows extremists and moderates–who disagree in opinion but share an identity–to maintain stable relationships in emergent clusters; Further, the structure concentrates extremists at the center of the clusters, enabling them to form a critical mass that enlists a broader population. Finally, beyond confirming our expectations, we uncover unexpected model behaviors by exploring how the "radicalized" structure can transition between three other distinct structures the model generates. We show that homogeneous groups, often seen as indicators of polarization, could paradoxically be key to reducing organized extremism when dominated by moderates who can effectively mobilize collective action while marginalizing extremists.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1570902024-10-03T03:41:38Z From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism Liang, Chen E. Reagans, Ray Zuckerman Sivan, Ezra W. Sloan School of Management Current sociological theories attribute the recent surge in political extremism to mechanisms of opinion “homophily” (i.e., like-minded individuals interact more while dissimilar ones might distance) and “assimilation (i.e., interactions homogenize opinions),” which collectively suggest a social world dominated by extreme views. Yet, this view contradicts empirical evidence showing that extremists still represent a minority and individual opinions remain largely stable. We resolve this apparent paradox by illustrating how extreme collective action can arise from a moderate majority that retains moderate opinions yet responds positively to recruitment by extremists. We break down this task into three steps. First, we theoretically distinguish between opinion homophily and identity homophily (i.e., individuals who share the same identity interact more). Second, we develop an agent-based model to manipulate the strength of identity homophily relative to opinion homophily, while excluding the effect of assimilation (i.e., holding opinions constant). Our model reveals that strong identity-based tolerance can create a “radicalized” structure, which allows extremists and moderates–who disagree in opinion but share an identity–to maintain stable relationships in emergent clusters; Further, the structure concentrates extremists at the center of the clusters, enabling them to form a critical mass that enlists a broader population. Finally, beyond confirming our expectations, we uncover unexpected model behaviors by exploring how the "radicalized" structure can transition between three other distinct structures the model generates. We show that homogeneous groups, often seen as indicators of polarization, could paradoxically be key to reducing organized extremism when dominated by moderates who can effectively mobilize collective action while marginalizing extremists. S.M. 2024-10-02T17:29:49Z 2024-10-02T17:29:49Z 2024-09 2024-08-22T19:43:18.440Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/157090 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Liang, Chen E.
From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title_full From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title_fullStr From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title_full_unstemmed From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title_short From Opinion Dynamics to Collective Action: How Identity-Based Tolerance Leads to Political Extremism
title_sort from opinion dynamics to collective action how identity based tolerance leads to political extremism
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/157090
work_keys_str_mv AT liangchene fromopiniondynamicstocollectiveactionhowidentitybasedtoleranceleadstopoliticalextremism