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Replication Data for: The Incidental Pundit: Who Talks Politics with Whom, and Why?

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: The Incidental Pundit: Who Talks Politics with Whom, and Why?
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VSVBTP
 
Creator Minozzi, William
Song, Hyunjin
Lazer, David M.J.
Neblo, Michael A.
Ognyanova, Katherine
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description Informal discussion plays a crucial role in democracy, yet much of its value depends
on diversity. We describe two models of political discussion. The purposive model holds that people typically select discussants who are knowledgeable and politically similar to them. The incidental model suggests that people talk politics for mostly idiosyncratic reasons, as byproducts of non-political social processes. To adjudicate between these accounts, we draw on a unique, multi-site, panel dataset of whole networks, with information about many social relationships, attitudes, and demographics. This evidence permits a stronger foundation for inferences than more common egocentric methods. We find that incidental processes shape discussion networks much more powerfully than purposive ones. Respondents tended to report discussants with whom they share other relationships and characteristics, rather than
based on expertise or political similarity, suggesting that stimulating discussion outside of echo chambers may be easier than previously thought.
 
Subject Social Sciences
Political discussion
Social networks
Political homogeneity
Exponential random graph models
 
Contributor Minozzi, William