Publication | Open Access
How Education Moderates the Relation between Globalization and Nationalist Attitudes
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Citations
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References
2013
Year
“We do not believe in the division between left and right. The true division is between those who want globalization and those who do not. We are a patriotic party,” stated the party leader of Hungarian Jobbik (Movement for a better Hungary) (Phillips, 2010). This is an example of how popular radical right-wing parties propagate renewed national pride as a response to globalization. It is often theorized that nationalist attitudes are strengthened by globalization because processes of globalization would constitute a threat to national culture and interests (Norris, 2005). Alternatively, because globalization implies increased knowledge of and contact with other people, products, and cultures, it might also lead to less nationalist attitudes (Norris & Inglehart, 2009). In this contribution, we examine these two possibilities with a greater number of countries and a more extended period than previous research (Ariely, 2012; Evans & Kelley, 2002; Kunovich, 2009; Norris & Inglehart, 2009). Moreover, that research did not examine whether globalization differently affects the nationalist attitude of the higher and lower educated. This is a relevant question because the theoretical literature predicts different consequences of globalization for feelings of insecurity and related nationalist attitudes, depending on the level of education (Brown & Lauder, 1996; Hainmueller & Hiscox, 2006).
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