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Journal Article

Citation

Wendell DG, Tatalovich R. Policy Sci. 2021; 54(1): 155-182.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11077-020-09399-8

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Morality policy researchers have long grappled with the difficulty of determining objective or empirical criteria for classifying policies with moral content. A newer, but related, critique has suggested that we cannot classify morality policies by their substantive content, because policy debates employ moral frames for strategic purposes. This paper joins this debate by using Moral Foundations Theory to conduct quantitative content analyses of the supporting and opposing arguments in Voter Guides that accompanied referenda on enacting (1) the death penalty, (2) same-sex marriage, (3) physician-assisted suicide, (4) Official English, (5) recreational marijuana, (6) medical marijuana, (7) abortion funding bans, (8) tribal gaming, (9) minimum wage increase, (10) Right to Work legislation, and (11) property tax limits. MFT quantitative content analysis shows that frames with ostensibly instrumental arguments hold moral content. Our findings endorse the argument that researchers should differentiate between pure and mixed morality policies and other non-morality policies with decidedly less moral content. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.


Language: en

Keywords

morality; policy implementation; Cannabis sativa; social policy; Content analysis; social theory; Rhetoric; Framing; policy making; policy approach; Morality policy; Moral Foundations Theory

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