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Network polarization: The study of political attitudes and social ties as dynamic multilevel networks

Kieran Mepham, András Vörös and Christoph Stadtfeld

Network Science, 2025, vol. 13, -

Abstract: Ideological and relational polarization are two increasingly salient political divisions in Western societies. We integrate the study of these phenomena by describing society as a multilevel network of social ties between people and attitudinal ties between people and political topics. We then define and propose a set of metrics to measure ‘network polarization’: the extent to which a community is ideologically and socially divided. Using longitudinal network modelling, we examine whether observed levels of network polarization can be explained by three processes: social selection, social influence, and latent-cause reinforcement. Applied to new longitudinal friendship and political attitude network data from two Swiss university cohorts, our metrics show mild polarization. The models explain this outcome and suggest that friendships and political attitudes are reciprocally formed and sustained. We find robust evidence for friend selection based on attitude similarity and weaker evidence for social influence. The results further point to latent-cause reinforcement processes: (dis)similar attitudes are more likely to be formed or maintained between individuals whose attitudes are already (dis)similar on a range of political issues. Applied across different cultural and political contexts, our approach may help to understand the degree and mechanisms of divisions in society.

Date: 2025
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