It is widely believed that ethnic politics and conflict are less pronounced in countries with cross-cutting rather than reinforcing social cleavages. We argue that one possible explanation is that cross-cutting cleavages facilitate cross-cutting social interaction among individuals from different ethnic and/or class groups. This article examines whether such cross-cutting interaction, relative to homogeneous interaction, can reduce support for ethnic politics and increase support for a cross-ethnic, programmatic alternative. We conduct an experiment in Lebanon in which 720 lower- and upper-class Christians, Sunnis, and Shia were randomly assigned to participate in discussions that varied in their sectarian and class compositions. Our evidence suggests that cross-sectarian discussion resulted in less support for sectarian politics but only when individuals also belonged to the same economic class, driven by greater learning about shared preferences and reduced coethnic social pressure. We also demonstrate the limitations of other forms of cross-cutting discussion, showing that interaction among coeth-nics or non-coethnics from different classes did not weaken support for ethnic politics. These findings reveal when and how interaction that leverages a second dimension of interest or identity can help shift political preferences, shedding new light on the foundations of support for cross-ethnic politics in ethnically divided societies.
How Cross-Cutting Discussion Shapes Support for Ethnic Politics: Evidence from an Experiment in Lebanon Available to Purchase
We are indebted to Joanna Fayed, Zeina Hawa, and Zeina Helou for their tireless help with implementation and to Kelly Morrison and Louis Wilson for their research assistance. We are also grateful to Michael Aklin, Peter Aronow, Luke Condra, Guy Grossman, Raymond Hicks, Macartan Humphreys, Lucy Martin, Betsy Levy Paluck, Cyrus Samii, Pavi Suryanarayan, Emily West, and participants at the NYU-WESSI conference, Yale Quantitative Research Methods Workshop, Harris School political economy seminar, and 2018 EGAP meeting in Nairobi for their helpful comments. This project was made possible by funding that LCPS received from the Embassy of Norway. This project is covered under University of Pittsburgh IRB PRO15060167 and the analysis was pre-registered at egap.org/registration/2208.
Paler L, Marshall L, Atallah S (2020), "How Cross-Cutting Discussion Shapes Support for Ethnic Politics: Evidence from an Experiment in Lebanon". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 15 No. 1 pp. 33–71, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00018188
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