2014
DOI: 10.1037/a0036170
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Do needs for security and certainty predict cultural and economic conservatism? A cross-national analysis.

Abstract: We examine whether individual differences in needs for security and certainty predict conservative (vs. liberal) position on both cultural and economic political issues and whether these effects are conditional on nation-level characteristics and individual-level political engagement. Analyses with cross-national data from 51 nations reveal that valuing conformity, security, and tradition over self-direction and stimulation (a) predicts ideological self-placement on the political right, but only among people h… Show more

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Cited by 233 publications
(421 citation statements)
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References 132 publications
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“…70 If citizens organize their attitudes differently, then this mismatch has potential implications for our understanding of the psychological origins of 64 E.g., Feldman and Johnston 2014;Johnson and Tamney 2001;Malka et al 2014. 65 E.g., Davis and Robinson 1996;Lipset 1966;Stenner 2005;Svallfors 1991. 66 Effects of needs for security and certainty on political attitudes within Wave 5 were reported in Malka et al (2014) using different model specifications. Analyses along these lines have not, to our knowledge, been reported yet for Wave 6.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…70 If citizens organize their attitudes differently, then this mismatch has potential implications for our understanding of the psychological origins of 64 E.g., Feldman and Johnston 2014;Johnson and Tamney 2001;Malka et al 2014. 65 E.g., Davis and Robinson 1996;Lipset 1966;Stenner 2005;Svallfors 1991. 66 Effects of needs for security and certainty on political attitudes within Wave 5 were reported in Malka et al (2014) using different model specifications. Analyses along these lines have not, to our knowledge, been reported yet for Wave 6.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As displayed in Figures 1 and 2, for each of these pairs, negative correlations with 95 per cent confidence intervals that do not include zero greatly outnumber positive correlations with 95 per cent confidence intervals that do not include zero. The percentage of nations for which the correlation was significantly positive (suggesting that right-wing cultural and economic attitudes more often go together) 54 See Malka et al 2014;Schwartz 1992. 55 Schwartz 1992. ranged from 7.4 per cent (Immigration-Business Ownership) to 20.8 per cent (Sexual MoralityBusiness Ownership) (see Table 1).…”
Section: Do Right-wing Cultural Attitudes Tend To Go With Right-wing mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The traditional association between high-brow music and intellectual sophistication, for example, has been challenged with the rise of cultural omnivorousness as a dominant logic of cultural consumption in Western societies (Peterson and Kern 1996). Similarly, the rationale that connects a belief in laissez-faire economics with an objection to legalized abortion is taken for granted in mainstream American political discourse but is not particularly prevalent elsewhere (Malka, Soto, Inzlicht, and Lelkes 2014;Baldassarri and Goldberg 2014). Though cultural clustering appears to be inexorable, the patterns it follows are not.…”
Section: Where Does Cultural Variation Come From?mentioning
confidence: 99%