Friday 14:00 - 15:45 CEST (11/09/2026) Building: Faculty of International and Political Studies, Floor: 1, Room: 111
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Abstract
This article synthesizes causal evidence on affective polarization through
a systematic literature review spanning 2012–2025. Anchored in an
emergence framework, we catalog 135 peer-reviewed studies located via
Google Scholar and Scopus and retained using SCImago Journal Rank
indexing (PRISMA-consistent). We code each article for outcome (vertical
attitudes toward parties/elites vs. horizontal attitudes toward citizens),
research design, measures, setting, and five driver families: psychological
factors, media and information environment, identity and group
processes, institutional factors, and socioeconomic factors. The corpus is
highly U.S.-centric, but it also includes cross-national and diverse country
cases. Horizontal and vertical outcomes are studied in comparable
numbers, yet their joint dynamics are rarely examined. Observational
surveys account for the majority of designs (65%), with experiments
(22%), mixed designs (9%), and computational/other approaches (4%)
less common. Explanations centered on psychology, media
exposure/content, and identity processes dominate; institutional and
socioeconomic mechanisms remain comparatively thin. Scholarly output
rises sharply after 2020, particularly in areas related to psychological and
media drivers, with recent growth in institutional accounts. We highlight
research needs, including comparative designs that leverage variation in
media and party systems, integrative analyses of horizontal-vertical
interactions, more rigorous and comparable measurement, and
longitudinal/panel studies to link short-run shocks with slow-moving
trends.