Simulating the influence of terror management strategies on the voter ideological distance using agent-based modeling
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Materia
Spatial theory of voting Terrorist attack Terror management Agent-Based Modeling
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Moya, I., Chica, M., Sáez-Lozano, J. L., & Cordón, Ó. (2021). Simulating the influence of terror management strategies on the voter ideological distance using agent-based modeling. Telematics and Informatics, DOI: 10.1016/j.tele.2021.101656.
Sponsorship
Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigacion, ´ the Andalusian Government, the University of Granada, and European Regional Development Funds (ERDF) under grants EXASOCO (PGC2018-101216-B-I00), SIMARK (P18-TP-4475), and AIMAR (A-TIC-284-UGR18).; Project I + D+i from the FEDER Operational Program, Andalusia (A-SEJ-154- UGR18); Universidad de Granada / CBUAAbstract
This paper simulates the effect of the strategies implemented by politicians after the terrorists
attacks in Madrid on 11 March 2004 on the ideological distance between voters and political
parties. The attacks took place three days before the elections and changed the campaign’s
agenda, which centered around the issue of who was responsible for the attack: ETA or Al Qaeda.
It also altered the agenda of the mass media, which focused its informative activity on broadcasting news related to this issue. We did an exhaustive selection process of all the news broadcast
on television, radio, and newspapers that made reference to the authorship of the attack. Using
these messages we developed an agent-based model for explaining how the political strategies
implemented by political parties influenced the ideological distance. The proposed model is based
on the ideological proximity model by Downs (1957). After calibrating and validating the model
with real data, we simulated the effect of three political strategies from the theory of terror
management on the ideological distance between voters and political parties: the rally around the
flag, the opinion leadership, and the priming of public opinion and media coverage. The results
show that these strategies have a significant and stable impact on the ideological distance. In
particular, the rally around the flag can have a lasting effect, capable of changing the ideological
distance in the short term after a terrorist attack.