How political are national identities? A comparison of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany in the 2010s
How political are national identities? A comparison of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany in the 2010s
Research demonstrates the multi-dimensional nature of American identity arguing that the normative content of American identity relates to political ideologies in the United States, but the sense of belonging to the nation does not. This paper replicates that analysis and extends it to the German and British cases. Exploratory structural equation modeling attests to cross-cultural validity of measures of the sense of belonging and norms of uncritical loyalty and engagement for positive change. In the 2010s, we find partisanship and ideology in all three nations explains levels of belonging and the two content dimensions. Interestingly, those identifying with major parties of the left and right in all three countries have a higher sense of belonging and uncritical loyalty than their moderate counterparts. The relationship between partisanship, ideology, and national identity seems to wax and wane over time, presumably because elite political discourse linking party or ideology to identity varies from one political moment to the next. </jats:p>
Mader, Matthias
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Scotto, Thomas J.
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Reifler, Jason
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Gries, Peter H.
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Isernia, Pierangelo
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Schoen, Harald
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July 2018
Mader, Matthias
febfb4b7-f222-4d5f-a035-28cf99d5930f
Scotto, Thomas J.
46d397ec-85ac-4a35-9020-552f4b493a77
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Gries, Peter H.
c2d34127-2642-475a-ad91-2542ff8fc704
Isernia, Pierangelo
a30646f2-785e-43d4-9d2c-44c0f12fa080
Schoen, Harald
5187e8db-a206-4bac-bb5a-bc48c67d63bb
Mader, Matthias, Scotto, Thomas J., Reifler, Jason, Gries, Peter H., Isernia, Pierangelo and Schoen, Harald
(2018)
How political are national identities? A comparison of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany in the 2010s.
Research & Politics.
(doi:10.1177/2053168018801469).
Abstract
Research demonstrates the multi-dimensional nature of American identity arguing that the normative content of American identity relates to political ideologies in the United States, but the sense of belonging to the nation does not. This paper replicates that analysis and extends it to the German and British cases. Exploratory structural equation modeling attests to cross-cultural validity of measures of the sense of belonging and norms of uncritical loyalty and engagement for positive change. In the 2010s, we find partisanship and ideology in all three nations explains levels of belonging and the two content dimensions. Interestingly, those identifying with major parties of the left and right in all three countries have a higher sense of belonging and uncritical loyalty than their moderate counterparts. The relationship between partisanship, ideology, and national identity seems to wax and wane over time, presumably because elite political discourse linking party or ideology to identity varies from one political moment to the next. </jats:p>
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mader-et-al-2018-how-political-are-national-identities-a-comparison-of-the-united-states-the-united-kingdom-and-germany
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Published date: July 2018
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Local EPrints ID: 497066
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497066
PURE UUID: 5bb971f7-96d2-4cfd-a984-4fdbd97b16fd
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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2025 15:39
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43
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Author:
Matthias Mader
Author:
Thomas J. Scotto
Author:
Jason Reifler
Author:
Peter H. Gries
Author:
Pierangelo Isernia
Author:
Harald Schoen
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