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Journal Article

Citation

Jost JT, Stern C, Rule NO, Sterling J. Soc. Cogn. 2017; 35(4): 324-353.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Guilford Press)

DOI

10.1521/soco.2017.35.4.324

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

A meta-analysis by Jost, Glaser, Kruglanski, and Sulloway (2003) suggested that existential needs to reduce threat were associated with political conservatism. Nevertheless, some maintain that fear plays as prevalent a role on the left as the right. In an attempt to resolve this issue, we reviewed evidence from 134 different samples (N = 369,525) and 16 countries--a database 16 times larger than those previously considered. Although the association between fear of death and conservatism was not reliable, there was a significant effect of mortality salience (r =.08-.13) and a significant association between subjective perceptions of threat and conservatism (r =.12-.31). Exposure to objectively threatening circumstances, such as terrorist attacks, was associated with a "conservative shift" at individual (r =.07-.14) and aggregate (r =.29-.66) levels of analysis. Psychological reactions to fear and threat thus convey a small-to-moderate political advantage for conservative leaders, parties, policies, and ideas.


Language: en

Keywords

Treat; Fear; Meta-analysis; Political conservatism

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