2019
DOI: 10.1037/pac0000397
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The influence of authoritarianism and outgroup threat on political affiliations and support for antidemocratic policies.

Abstract: An understanding of contemporary U.S. politics requires an understanding of authoritarianism and perceptions of outgroup threat. Previous research suggests that the threat of terrorism and growing authoritarianism within the Republican Party help to explain Donald Trump’s electoral victory (Hetherington & Weiler, 2009; MacWilliams, 2016). We replicated and extended previous findings through the use of 2 surveys completed by 704 participants and found that those higher in authoritarianism were more conservative… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…With regard to political outcomes, the motivational bases of SDO and RWA should draw people towards political parties (and policies) that, respectively, bolster group-based inequalities and manage threats to traditional norms and group cohesion (Duckitt & Sibley, 2009). Consistent with this thesis, SDO and RWA correlate positively with support for conservative/right-wing policies (i.e., policies that promote group cohesion and/or are hierarchy enhancing) and political parties (Azevedo, Jost, Rothmund, & Sterling, 2019;Choma & Hanoch, 2017;Crawford & Pilanski, 2014;Duckitt & Sibley, 2016;Dunwoody & Plane, 2019;Liu, Huang, & McFedries, 2008;Perry & Sibley, 2013;Sibley & Wilson, 2007;Van Assche, Dhont, & Pettigrew, 2019). Furthermore, experimental research shows that RWA and SDO predict political candidate support more strongly when those candidates frame their policy positions in terms of threats to social cohesion and group status, respectively (Crawford, Bradya, Pilanskia, & Ernya, 2013).…”
Section: Ideology and Political Party Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…With regard to political outcomes, the motivational bases of SDO and RWA should draw people towards political parties (and policies) that, respectively, bolster group-based inequalities and manage threats to traditional norms and group cohesion (Duckitt & Sibley, 2009). Consistent with this thesis, SDO and RWA correlate positively with support for conservative/right-wing policies (i.e., policies that promote group cohesion and/or are hierarchy enhancing) and political parties (Azevedo, Jost, Rothmund, & Sterling, 2019;Choma & Hanoch, 2017;Crawford & Pilanski, 2014;Duckitt & Sibley, 2016;Dunwoody & Plane, 2019;Liu, Huang, & McFedries, 2008;Perry & Sibley, 2013;Sibley & Wilson, 2007;Van Assche, Dhont, & Pettigrew, 2019). Furthermore, experimental research shows that RWA and SDO predict political candidate support more strongly when those candidates frame their policy positions in terms of threats to social cohesion and group status, respectively (Crawford, Bradya, Pilanskia, & Ernya, 2013).…”
Section: Ideology and Political Party Preferencesmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Nonetheless, higher scores on such ostensibly ideologically neutral measures are still correlated with preferences for right-wing or conservative candidates (Duckitt, Bizumic, Krauss, & Heled, 2010;Dunwoody & Funke, 2016, Dunwoody & Plane, 2019Ludeke, Klitgaard, & Vitriol, 2018), with coefficients being around the same as those observed with traditional measures of RWA (Nilsson & Jost, 2020). This does pose a potential issue for the argument that ideological asymmetries are related to inherent political content embedded within scales.…”
Section: (Right-wing) Authoritarianismmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…ASC is comprised of three subscales: (1) authoritarian submission; (2) authoritarian aggression; and (3) conventionalism. The ASC can be used as a single measure (Dunwoody and McFarland, 2018) or as subscales (Dunwoody and Plane, 2019). Overall scale reliability (Cronbach alpha = .80 to .86), and subscale reliability have been reported at acceptable levels (Dunwoody and Funke, 2018).…”
Section: Survey Designmentioning
confidence: 99%