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Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat

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Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat. / Thomsen, Jens Peter Frølund; Rafiqi, Arzoo.
I: Political Studies, Bind 68, Nr. 2, 0032321719862751, 2020, s. 523-540.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avisTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

Harvard

Thomsen, JPF & Rafiqi, A 2020, 'Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat', Political Studies, bind 68, nr. 2, 0032321719862751, s. 523-540. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321719862751

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Thomsen JPF, Rafiqi A. Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat. Political Studies. 2020;68(2):523-540. 0032321719862751. doi: 10.1177/0032321719862751

Author

Thomsen, Jens Peter Frølund ; Rafiqi, Arzoo. / Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat. I: Political Studies. 2020 ; Bind 68, Nr. 2. s. 523-540.

Bibtex

@article{3e2d8a954fef4a1b87dadbfdcbed83d5,
title = "Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat",
abstract = "Previous studies have not examined whether (personal) political ideology influences how trusters perceive of immigrants and refugees as a threat. Our contribution to the literature builds on theories of motivated reasoning and hypothesizes that political ideology weakens the ability of social trust to reduce perceived (ethnic) outgroup threat. Indeed, analyses show that the relationship between social trust and perceived outgroup threat is considerably weaker among rightists than among leftists. Although social trust does relate negatively to perceived outgroup threat across the ideological divide, political ideology has a constraining influence that cannot be ignored. Social trust is also a political phenomenon. We apply a fixed-effects regression, and analyses are based on the 2014-European Social Survey, including 21 countries and 32,175 individuals. In the concluding section, we discuss the full implications of our findings for theories of social trust in an era of increasing flows of immigrants and refugees that go beyond the usual gateway nations.",
keywords = "ethnic outgroup threat, fixed-effects regression, motivated reasoning, political ideology, social trust",
author = "Thomsen, {Jens Peter Fr{\o}lund} and Arzoo Rafiqi",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1177/0032321719862751",
language = "English",
volume = "68",
pages = "523--540",
journal = "Political Studies",
issn = "0032-3217",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ideological Biases Weaken the Impact of Social Trust on Ethnic Outgroup Threat

AU - Thomsen, Jens Peter Frølund

AU - Rafiqi, Arzoo

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Previous studies have not examined whether (personal) political ideology influences how trusters perceive of immigrants and refugees as a threat. Our contribution to the literature builds on theories of motivated reasoning and hypothesizes that political ideology weakens the ability of social trust to reduce perceived (ethnic) outgroup threat. Indeed, analyses show that the relationship between social trust and perceived outgroup threat is considerably weaker among rightists than among leftists. Although social trust does relate negatively to perceived outgroup threat across the ideological divide, political ideology has a constraining influence that cannot be ignored. Social trust is also a political phenomenon. We apply a fixed-effects regression, and analyses are based on the 2014-European Social Survey, including 21 countries and 32,175 individuals. In the concluding section, we discuss the full implications of our findings for theories of social trust in an era of increasing flows of immigrants and refugees that go beyond the usual gateway nations.

AB - Previous studies have not examined whether (personal) political ideology influences how trusters perceive of immigrants and refugees as a threat. Our contribution to the literature builds on theories of motivated reasoning and hypothesizes that political ideology weakens the ability of social trust to reduce perceived (ethnic) outgroup threat. Indeed, analyses show that the relationship between social trust and perceived outgroup threat is considerably weaker among rightists than among leftists. Although social trust does relate negatively to perceived outgroup threat across the ideological divide, political ideology has a constraining influence that cannot be ignored. Social trust is also a political phenomenon. We apply a fixed-effects regression, and analyses are based on the 2014-European Social Survey, including 21 countries and 32,175 individuals. In the concluding section, we discuss the full implications of our findings for theories of social trust in an era of increasing flows of immigrants and refugees that go beyond the usual gateway nations.

KW - ethnic outgroup threat

KW - fixed-effects regression

KW - motivated reasoning

KW - political ideology

KW - social trust

U2 - 10.1177/0032321719862751

DO - 10.1177/0032321719862751

M3 - Journal article

VL - 68

SP - 523

EP - 540

JO - Political Studies

JF - Political Studies

SN - 0032-3217

IS - 2

M1 - 0032321719862751

ER -