Publication | Closed Access
Post-Materialism in an Environment of Insecurity
811
Citations
31
References
1981
Year
Social TheoryPolitical BehaviorSocial ChangeEconomic HistoryEconomic InstitutionsSocial SciencesPolitical EconomyCommodificationAnti-oppressive PracticeSocial IdentityYoung TechnocratsMaterial CultureClass ConflictHistorical TransitionPolitical CultureSociologyPolitical PluralismPostwar AffluenceSecurityPolitical CleavagePolitical TransformationEconomic ChangeArtsSocial AnthropologyPolitical Science
This article tests the hypothesis that postwar affluence led to an intergenerational shift from Materialist to Post-Materialist values among Western publics, and analyzes the consequences of the economic uncertainty prevailing since 1973. The young emphasize Post-Materialist values more than the old. Time-series data indicate that this reflects generational change far more than aging effects, but that the recession of the mid-1970s also produced significant period effects. As Post-Materialists aged, they moved out of the student ghetto and became a predominant influence among young technocrats, contributing to the rise of a “New Class.” They furnish the ideologues and core support for the environmental, zero-growth and antinuclear movements; and their opposition to those who give top priority to reindustrialization and rearmament constitutes a distinctive and persisting dimension of political cleavage.
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