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Critical Review
A Journal of Politics and Society
Volume 24, 2012 - Issue 2: POLITICAL DOGMATISM
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Research

DEEP DOWN: CONSEQUENTIALIST ASSUMPTIONS UNDERLYING POLICY DIFFERENCES

Pages 269-289 | Published online: 20 Sep 2012
 

Abstract

A conditional survey establishes a preliminary case for believing that policy differences are to some extent driven by fundamental beliefs about empirical aspects of society and economics. The survey shows willingness in about a third of all respondents to shift their expressed policy preferences when asked a hypothetical question positing negative consequences of their initial preferences. This suggests that assumptions about the consequences of public policies may play as important a role in policy preferences, or a more important role, than do values, personality traits, or motivation. However, roughly a third of those with the strongest initial attitudes expressed even stronger attitudes—but in the same direction—when confronted with counterattitudinal hypotheticals. This may reflect attitude polarization of the sort encountered by previous researchers, such as Lord et al. (1979) and Taber and Lodge (2006). Or it may indicate a tacit objection to the very idea of basing policy preferences on policy consequences.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Zeljka Buturovic

Zeljka Buturovic, the recent recipient of a Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University, is a senior research associate at IBOPE Inteligencia

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