6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268dae
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The measurement of populist attitudes: Testing cross-national scales using item response theory
Steven M. Van HauwaertChristian H. SchimpfFlavio Azevedosubject
05 social sciencesScale development050301 educationFace (sociological concept)Individual level0506 political sciencePopulismScale (social sciences)Political Science and International RelationsItem response theory050602 political science & public administrationPositive economicsPsychology0503 educationCross nationaldescription
Recent research in the populism literature has devoted considerable efforts to the conceptualisation and examination of populism on the individual level, that is, populist attitudes. Despite rapid progress in the field, questions of adequate measurement and empirical evaluation of measures of populist attitudes remain scarce. Seeking to remedy these shortcomings, we apply a cross-national measurement model, using item response theory, to six established and two new populist indicators. Drawing on a cross-national survey (nine European countries, n = 18,368), we engage in a four-folded analysis. First, we examine the commonly used 6-item populism scale. Second, we expand the measurement with two novel items. Third, we use the improved 8-item populism scale to further refine equally comprehensive but more concise and parsimonious populist measurements. Finally, we externally validate these sub-scales and find that some of the proposed sub-scales outperform the initial 6- and 8-item scales. We conclude that existing measures of populism capture moderate populist attitudes, but face difficulties measuring more extreme levels, while the individual information of some of the populist items remains limited. Altogether, this provides several interesting routes for future research, both within and between countries.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019-07-08 | Politics |