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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Beyond “liberals” and “conservatives”: Complexity in ideology, moral intuitions, and worldview among Swedish voters

Maria SandgrenArtur NilssonHenry MontgomeryGirts DimdinsAdrian TalenyArvid Erlandsson

subject

worldviewPolitical Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalisation Studies)Psykologi (exklusive tillämpad psykologi)Social Psychologymoral intuitionsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencespolitical valuesparty preference050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologyEpistemologyPsychology (excluding Applied Psychology)PoliticsCongruence (geometry)political preferencespolitical preferences; moral intuitions; worldview; political values; party preferenceMoral intuitions0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesIdeologyPsychologyStatsvetenskap (exklusive studier av offentlig förvaltning och globaliseringsstudier)media_common

description

This research investigated the congruence between the ideologies of political parties and the ideological preferences (N = 1515), moral intuitions (N = 1048), and political values and worldviews (N = 1345) of diverse samples of Swedish adults who voted or intended to vote for the parties. Logistic regression analyses yielded support for a series of hypotheses about variations in ideology beyond the left-right division. With respect to social ideology, resistance to change and binding moral intuitions predicted stronger preference for a social democratic (vs. progressive) party on the left and weaker preference for a social liberal (vs. social conservative or liberal-conservative) party on the right. With respect to political values and broader worldviews, normativism and low acceptance of immigrants predicted the strongest preference for a nationalist party, while environmentalism predicted the strongest preference for a green party. The effects were generally strong and robust when we controlled for left-right self-placements, economic ideology, and demographic characteristics. These results show that personality variation in the ideological domain is not reducible to the simplistic contrast between liberals and conservatives, which ignores differences between progressive and non-progressive leftists, economic and green progressives, social liberal and conservative rightists, and nationalist and non-nationalist conservatives. (c) 2020 The Authors. European Journal of Personality published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Association of Personality Psychology Funding Agencies|Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet)Swedish Research Council [2014-01158]; Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies [A056-2012]

https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/n83t5