party identity

Disinformation, Party Identity and the Effectiveness of Fact-Checking in Taiwan: A Survey Experiment Design

The growing concern over misinformation stems from its potential to significantly disrupt democratic governance. This study examines the case of Taiwan and employs a survey experiment featuring realworld misinformation examples to evaluate the effectiveness of factchecking corrections in reducing public misperceptions. Grounded in the dual-process theory from social psychology and informed by existing international research, the study proposes and tests four theoretically driven hypotheses—all of which are supported by the empirical findings.

Party Competition and the Connection between the Taiwanese Ethnic Identity and National Identity

In the process of Taiwan’s democratization, scholars assert that ethnic identity, national identity, and party identity are closely linked with each other. In this paper, in addition to carefully examining the relationships among the three identities from the historical, political and sociological perspectives, we provide our hypotheses after investigating the political competition among political parties. We assert that to maximize their political benefit, political actors manipulate the definition and the content of the ethnic identity.

訂閱 RSS - party identity