Publication | Closed Access
Exploring the Multidimensional Facets of Authoritarianism: Authoritarian Aggression and Social Dominance Orientation
51
Citations
40
References
2008
Year
Regime AnalysisPersonality ScienceSocial PsychologyIntergroup ConflictMultidimensional FacetsEducationSocial InfluenceSocial Dominance OrientationPolitical BehaviorPower RelationSocial SciencesPsychologyDemocracyFactor AnalysisSocial ConflictConformityApplied Social PsychologyCoercionAuthoritarianismAggressionHigh Social DominanceSocial BehaviorSociologyPolitical AttitudesAuthoritarian AggressionPolitical Science
The relation between authoritarianism and social dominance orientation was analyzed, with authoritarianism measured using a three-dimensional scale. The implicit multidimensional structure (authoritarian submission, conventionalism, authoritarian aggression) of Altemeyer’s (1981, 1988) conceptualization of authoritarianism is inconsistent with its one-dimensional methodological operationalization. The dimensionality of authoritarianism was investigated using confirmatory factor analysis in a sample of 713 university students. As hypothesized, the three-factor model fit the data significantly better than the one-factor model. Regression analyses revealed that only authoritarian aggression was related to social dominance orientation. That is, only intolerance of deviance was related to high social dominance, whereas submissiveness was not.
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