Research

Descriptive or Partisan Representation? Examining Trade-Offs for Asian Americans

With John Cho and Mia Costa, British Journal of Political Science

Diversity, Identity & DiscriminationPublished ArticleEnglishStudent project: Dartmouth
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Abstract

Do voters want representatives who share their race, ethnicity, or partisanship? We examine this question with a focus on Asian Americans who face trade-offs between descriptive (that is, Asian American or ‘pan-ethnic’) and partisan representation, as well as trade-offs involving ‘co-ethnic’ (for example, Korean for Korean) and ‘cross-ethnic’ (for example, Indian for Korean) descriptive representation. Across two experiments, we find that when Asian Americans are asked about collective representation in Congress, they prioritize more co-ethnic and pan-ethnic legislators over co-partisan legislators. However, in a competitive electoral setting, they often trade off race/ethnicity for partisanship. Asian Americans are only willing to cross party lines to vote for a co-ethnic candidate, but never for a cross- or pan-ethnic candidate. These findings shed light on the importance of considering heterogeneous preferences along ethnicities within the same racial ‘in-group’, such as Asian Americans, a heavily understudied and heterogeneous group in American politics.

Abstract source: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123425101324

Citation

Cho, John J., Mia Costa, and Yusaku Horiuchi. 2026. “Descriptive or Partisan Representation? Examining Trade-Offs for Asian Americans.” British Journal of Political Science 56: e8. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123425101324

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