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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
This panel focuses on the formation of public opinion and policies in Taiwan. How do people transfer their opinions into policies? How do partisanship and self-interest shape the preferences? Five articles in this panel will use survey experiments and qualitative interviews to investigate the key factors behind opinion formation.
How Ideas Shape Politics: Scientific Advising and Public Health in Taiwan - Joshua Brent Freedman, University of Pennsylvania
Political Boundary and Solidarity: Evidence from Taiwan’s Social Security Reform - Wei-Ting Yen, Franklin & Marshall College; Ming-Jui Yeh
Public Support of Free Speech Limitations in Taiwan: The Partisan Connection - Timothy S. Rich, Western Kentucky University
Threat Perception and Taiwan Citizens’ Resistance to China’s Coercion - T.Y. Wang, Illinois State University; Su-Feng Cheng, National Chengchi University
Taiwanese Perceptions of US Credibility in the Taiwan Strait - Wen-Chin Wu, Academia Sinica; Hsin-Hsin Pan, Soochow University; James Lee, Academia Sinica; Chien-Huei Wu, Institute of European and American Studies
Proponents of Populism: Cohort Effects on Populist Attitudes in East Asia - Lewis Alexander Luartz, Chapman University; YI-PING LIN, Freie Universität Berlin; Matthew Yi-Hsiu Lee, National Taiwan University