Gender, Events, and Elite Messages in Mass Opinion on Foreign Relations

Author:

Bae Joonbum1,Lee YuJung Julia2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Colgate University

2. Colorado State University

Abstract

Abstract Do women respond in different ways to foreign policy events and elite messages compared to men? This article integrates the literature on gender and conflict with that on public opinion to examine how gender matters for the effect of elite messages and national security events on public opinion regarding a foreign adversary. We theorize that women’s opinions of an adversary are more likely than men’s to be influenced by national security events because of the higher value they attach to the costs of conflict. Our empirical analysis takes advantage of the natural setting of inter-Korea relations, which includes unpredictable, thus plausibly exogenous, real-world national security events instigated by North Korea and contrasting messages regarding North Korea by South Korea’s elites during this timeframe. Using annual survey data from a nationally representative sample of South Koreans about attitudes toward North Korea from 2003 to 2016, we find that foreign policy events of high consequence for national security have a greater negative impact on women’s opinions. This is the case even in the face of positive elite messages that contradict those events.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Safety Research

Reference43 articles.

1. The North Korean Regime, Domestic Instability and Foreign Policy;Bae;North Korean Review,2018

2. Limits of Engagement? The Sunshine Policy, Nuclear Tests, and South Korean Views of North Korea 1995–2013;Bae;International Relations of the Asia-Pacific,2019

3. How Public Opinion Constrains the use of Force: The Case of Operation Restore Hope;Baum;Presidential Studies Quarterly,2004

4. Reality Asserts Itself: Public Opinion on Iraq and the Elasticity of Reality;Baum;International Organization,2010

5. Gender Differences in Public Attitudes toward the Gulf War: A Test of Competing Hypotheses;Bendyna;The Social Science Journal,1996

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