A unified theory of value-based reasoning and U.S. public opinion
A unified theory of value-based reasoning and U.S. public opinion
Public opinion research shows that American citizens utilize domain-specific political values to guide opinion formation in the key issue areas that comprise the American political agenda. One set of political values operates on economic welfare opinions, a different set of values applies to cultural issue positions, a third set shapes foreign policy preferences, and so on in other policy domains. Drawing on Shalom Schwartz’s theory of basic human values, this paper argues that two socially focused values—self-transcendence and conservation—guide opinion formation across all major policy domains. By contrast, the personally focused values of self-enhancement and openness-to-change should play a more limited role in preference formation. These hypotheses are tested using data from a novel 2011 national survey and the 2012 General Social Survey. The statistical results affirm expectations. We show that self-transcendence and conservation values predict scores on symbolic ideology, economic conservatism, racial
977-997
Goren, Paul
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Schoen, Harald
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Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Scotto, Thomas
ed4dc8b3-9656-4f8a-89fe-298daed50fcf
Chittick, William
b6218e61-41d2-4025-b8df-ae5028b24baf
6 May 2016
Goren, Paul
c4d36d98-36b2-4b8f-8158-5fa53676ef3f
Schoen, Harald
6fc8ed20-53b8-4b50-8ff6-cd51d41f3b09
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Scotto, Thomas
ed4dc8b3-9656-4f8a-89fe-298daed50fcf
Chittick, William
b6218e61-41d2-4025-b8df-ae5028b24baf
Goren, Paul, Schoen, Harald, Reifler, Jason, Scotto, Thomas and Chittick, William
(2016)
A unified theory of value-based reasoning and U.S. public opinion.
Political Behavior, 38 (1), .
(doi:10.1007/s11109-016-9344-x).
Abstract
Public opinion research shows that American citizens utilize domain-specific political values to guide opinion formation in the key issue areas that comprise the American political agenda. One set of political values operates on economic welfare opinions, a different set of values applies to cultural issue positions, a third set shapes foreign policy preferences, and so on in other policy domains. Drawing on Shalom Schwartz’s theory of basic human values, this paper argues that two socially focused values—self-transcendence and conservation—guide opinion formation across all major policy domains. By contrast, the personally focused values of self-enhancement and openness-to-change should play a more limited role in preference formation. These hypotheses are tested using data from a novel 2011 national survey and the 2012 General Social Survey. The statistical results affirm expectations. We show that self-transcendence and conservation values predict scores on symbolic ideology, economic conservatism, racial
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Published date: 6 May 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 497181
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497181
ISSN: 0190-9320
PURE UUID: 0b776b48-d16f-4612-87bb-b7990cfb5843
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Date deposited: 15 Jan 2025 18:00
Last modified: 08 Feb 2025 03:17
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Author:
Paul Goren
Author:
Harald Schoen
Author:
Jason Reifler
Author:
Thomas Scotto
Author:
William Chittick
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