Interdisciplinary Workshop on Comparative Politics (IWCP)

The Interdisciplinary Workshop on Comparative Politics (IWCP) provides a platform for sharing and improving research projects that use the comparative method to study the causes and effects of political, social, and economic processes.



Session Is Over
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Prefunction Room (5th Floor Haven Hall)
Cesi Cruz

Abstract: Across the world, politicians have been winning elections using new forms of campaigning to reach citizens directly, often using emotional rather than policy appeals. Do these forms of campaigning work for programmatic politicians as well? We partner with a mainstream opposition political party to implement a field experiment during the 2019 Philippine Senatorial election to test the effectiveness of: (i) direct in-person appeals providing policy information; (ii) the addition of an activity designed to engender positive emotion. We show that direct engagement providing policy information increases vote share for the party, even in a clientelistic context. Additionally, while the emotional activity increases engagement with the campaign in the short term, the information-only treatment was more effective. Last, we present evidence that the treatments operated through learning and persuasion channels: treated voters were more likely to know the party, more certain about their knowledge, and gave higher ratings to the party’s quality and proposed policies.


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