Seeking politically compatible neighbors? The role of neighborhood partisan composition in residential sorting

High rates of internal migration throughout the United States offer opportunities to examine the factors underlying residential selection and neighborhood choice. We devise a survey experiment where respondents are shown photographs of properties and information about the local socioeconomic environment. By providing and varying additional information about the neighborhood partisan composition, our survey experiment explores how political information affects property evaluation. We find that the same property will be evaluated more favorably by partisans when they learn that it is situated in a predominantly co-partisan neighborhood. A second experiment examines how people make judgments about neighborhood partisan composition in the absence of readily available information. We learn that correct inferences about the politics of a locale can be drawn from non-political information about it, even without exposure to direct information about its partisan balance.

[1]  Robert Huckfeldt,et al.  Political Participation and the Neighborhood Social Context , 1979 .

[2]  R. Huckfeldt Political Loyalties and Social Class Ties: The Mechanisms of Contextual Influence* , 1984 .

[3]  James G. Gimpel,et al.  Interstate Migration and Electoral Politics , 2001, The Journal of Politics.

[4]  J. Kennan,et al.  The Effect of Expected Income on Individual Migration Decisions , 2003 .

[5]  P. Sharkey,et al.  Neighborhood selection and the social reproduction of concentrated racial inequality , 2008, Demography.

[6]  M. Sirgy,et al.  Explaining housing preference and choice: The role of self-congruity and functional congruity , 2005 .

[7]  S. Asch Effects of Group Pressure Upon the Modification and Distortion of Judgments , 1951 .

[8]  Christopher H. Achen Interpreting and Using Regression , 1982 .

[9]  T. Veblen The Theory of the Leisure Class , 1901 .

[10]  Russell W. Belk,et al.  Possessions and Self , 2010 .

[11]  Richard L. Morrill,et al.  Anomalies in Red and Blue II: Towards an understanding of the roles of setting, values, and demography in the 2004 and 2008 U.S. presidential elections , 2011 .

[12]  H. Theil Introduction to econometrics , 1978 .

[13]  Matthew E. Kahn,et al.  The capitalization of green labels in the California housing market , 2014 .

[14]  D. Varady Influences on the City-Suburban Choice A Study of Cincinnati Homebuyers , 1990 .

[15]  R. Huckfeldt,et al.  Citizens, Politics and Social Communication: Information and Influence in an Election Campaign , 1995 .

[16]  E. L. Landon,et al.  Self Concept, Ideal Self Concept, and Consumer Purchase Intentions , 1974 .

[17]  J. Sussell,et al.  New Support for the Big Sort Hypothesis: An Assessment of Partisan Geographic Sorting in California, 1992–2010 , 2013, PS: Political Science & Politics.

[18]  Iris S. Hui Who is Your Preferred Neighbor? Partisan Residential Preferences and Neighborhood Satisfaction , 2013 .

[19]  Samuel D. Gosling,et al.  Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You , 2008 .

[20]  Wendy K. Tam Cho,et al.  Voter Migration and the Geographic Sorting of the American Electorate , 2013 .

[21]  エレン グッドマン 自分が望む死に方を選ぼう (HBR Articles 世界の課題を解決する HBR 13の提言) , 2012 .

[22]  M. Macy,et al.  Small Worlds and Cultural Polarization , 2011 .

[23]  L. Rainwater,et al.  Social Standing In America: New Dimensions of Class , 1978 .

[24]  J. McDowell,et al.  Migration and employment change: empirical evidence on the spatial and temporal dimensions of the linkage. , 1986, Journal of regional science.

[25]  Robert Huckfeldt,et al.  Unanimity, Discord, and the Communication of Public Opinion , 2007 .

[26]  S. Iyengar,et al.  Affect, Not Ideology A Social Identity Perspective on Polarization , 2012 .

[27]  W. Clark,et al.  Internal Migration and Employment: Macro Flows and Micro Motives , 2011 .

[28]  G. Borjas,et al.  Self-Selection and Internal Migration in the United States , 1992, Journal of urban economics.

[29]  M. McPherson,et al.  Birds of a Feather: Homophily in Social Networks , 2001 .

[30]  Thad Dunning,et al.  Natural Experiments in the Social Sciences , 2012 .

[31]  Thomas C. Schelling,et al.  Dynamic models of segregation , 1971 .

[32]  Kenneth D. Bahn,et al.  Developmental Recognition of Consumption Symbolism , 1982 .

[33]  Scott D. McClurg,et al.  Political Disagreement in Context: The Conditional Effect of Neighborhood Context, Disagreement and Political Talk on Electoral Participation , 2006 .

[34]  M. Cadwallader,et al.  Migration and Residential Mobility: Macro and Micro Approaches , 1994 .

[35]  S. Bamberg How does environmental concern influence specific environmentally related behaviors? A new answer to an old question , 2003 .

[36]  W. Clark,et al.  Residential preferences and neighborhood racial segregation: A test of the schelling segregation model , 1991, Demography.

[37]  T. Robinson,et al.  Voter migration as a source of electoral change in the Rocky Mountain West , 2010 .

[38]  Ruy A. Teixeira,et al.  The Emerging Democratic Majority , 2002 .

[39]  Brian A. Nosek,et al.  How Ideological Migration Geographically Segregates Groups , 2014 .

[40]  Seth C. McKee Rural Voters and the Polarization of American Presidential Elections , 2008, PS: Political Science & Politics.

[41]  Matthew E. Kahn Do greens drive Hummers or hybrids? Environmental ideology as a determinant of consumer choice , 2007 .

[42]  Camille Z. Charles,et al.  Neighborhood Racial-Composition Preferences: Evidence from a Multiethnic Metropolis , 2000 .

[43]  Americus Reed Social identity as a useful perspective for self-concept–based consumer research , 2002 .

[44]  Jillian Anable,et al.  'Complacent Car Addicts' or 'Aspiring Environmentalists'? Identifying travel behaviour segments using attitude theory , 2005 .

[45]  Casey A. Klofstad,et al.  The Dating Preferences of Liberals and Conservatives , 2013 .

[46]  David A. Plane,et al.  Voters on the move: The political effectiveness of migration and its effects on state partisan composition , 2012 .

[47]  M. Greenwood,et al.  Research on Internal Migration in the United States: A Survey , 1975 .

[48]  R. Morrill,et al.  Anomalies in red and blue: Exceptionalism in American electoral geography , 2007 .

[49]  S. Levy Symbols for Sale , 1999 .

[50]  Steven E. Sexton,et al.  Conspicuous conservation: The Prius halo and willingness to pay for environmental bona fides , 2014 .

[51]  Chip Heath,et al.  Who Drives Divergence? Identity-Signaling, Outgroup Dissimilarity, and the Abandonment of Cultural Tastes , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[52]  Robert Huckfeldt,et al.  Social Contexts, Social Networks, and Urban Neighborhoods: Environmental Constraints on Friendship Choice , 1983, American Journal of Sociology.

[53]  B. Campbell Patterns of Change in the Partisan Loyalties of Native Southerners: 1952- 1972 , 1977, The Journal of Politics.

[54]  Bill Bishop,et al.  The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart , 2008 .

[55]  Seth C. McKee,et al.  What Made Carolina Blue? In-Migration and the 2008 North Carolina Presidential Vote , 2010 .

[56]  L. Long,et al.  Migration and Residential Mobility in the United States , 1988 .

[57]  Sylvia J. T. Jansen,et al.  What is the worth of values in guiding residential preferences and choices? , 2012, Journal of Housing and the Built Environment.

[58]  Ian McDonald,et al.  Migration and Sorting in the American Electorate: Evidence From the 2006 Cooperative Congressional Election Study , 2011 .

[59]  Jonathan Rodden,et al.  Unintentional Gerrymandering: Political Geography and Electoral Bias in Legislatures , 2013 .