Give Me Attitudes

Posted: 13 May 2016

See all articles by Peter K. Hatemi

Peter K. Hatemi

Penn State

Rose McDermott

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs

Date Written: May 2016

Abstract

Explorations of political attitudes and ideologies have sought to explain where they come from. They have been presumed to be rooted in processes of socialization; to be imposed by elites through partisan affiliations, the social milieu, and experiences; or to result from psychological traits. Far less attention has been focused on the inherent component of attitudes and where attitudes lead. Synthesizing research across academic fields, we propose that attitudes are a core constituent element of individual temperament, with far-reaching influence on many aspects of psychological and social functioning. Once instantiated, political values guide human behavior across domains, including affiliation into social networks, mate selection, physiological perception, psychological disposition, personality characteristics, morality construction, decision making, and selection into the very environments that influence political preferences. Here, we reconceptualize the ontology of political attitudes and ideologies from both a top-down and bottom-up perspective and as a combination of biological and environmental processes that drive an entire suite of coordinated downstream effects across the life course.

Suggested Citation

Hatemi, Peter K. and McDermott, Rose, Give Me Attitudes (May 2016). Annual Review of Political Science, Vol. 19, pp. 331-350, 2016, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2779567 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-103113-034929

Peter K. Hatemi (Contact Author)

Penn State ( email )

University Park
State College, PA 16802
United States

Rose McDermott

Brown University - Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs ( email )

111 Thayer Street
Box 1970
Providence, RI 02912-1970
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
610
PlumX Metrics