Papers
AER2026

Friendship Networks and Political Opinions

Yann Algan, Nicolò Dalvit, Quoc-Anh Do, Alexis Le Chapelain, Yves Zenou

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1
Latest record
2026-06-01
Primary source
AER
TL;DR

We examine how social interactions and friendships shape students’ political opinions in a natural experiment at Sciences Po, a leading French university specializing in social and political sciences.

AEREducationIVRCT
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AER
Fields
Education
Methods and data
IVRCT
Abstract

We examine how social interactions and friendships shape students’ political opinions in a natural experiment at Sciences Po, a leading French university specializing in social and political sciences. The quasi-random assignment of students into short-term integration groups before their academic curriculum reduces political opinion gaps and fosters friendship formation. Using same-group membership as an instrumental variable for friendship, we find that friendship reduces opinion differences by 44 percent of the mean opinion gap. Our evidence supports a homophily-enforced mechanism: Friendships form among initially politically similar students, leading them to join political associations together, reinforcing their similarity. (JEL C93, D72, Z13)

Source versions
AER2026-06-01
American Economic Review 116(6):2202-2241
10.1257/aer.20231344
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