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Social Traditionalism and Economic Conservatism: Two Conservative Political Ideologies in the United States
72
Citations
34
References
2001
Year
Political TheorySocial TheoryPolitical ProcessPublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorSocial TraditionalismPublic ChoiceUnited StatesSocial SciencesPolitical EconomyElection ForecastingAmerican PoliticsEconomic ConservatismPublic PolicyConservative ProtestantsPolitical CompetitionPolitical IdeologyPolitical CultureSociologyPolitical AttitudesPolitical MovementsPolitical ScienceConservative Political Ideologies
The authors surveyed by telephone a random sample of voters in the 1996 presidential election from the Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area of Muncie, IN ("Middletown"; R. Lynd & H. Lynd, 1929) to test a model describing the nature of 2 conservative political ideologies--social traditionalism and economic conservatism. The model, based on functions of attitudes theory, predicted (a) that the 2 political ideologies would appeal to 2 rather distinct constituency groups--the former, to conservative Protestants; the latter, to people of higher incomes--and (b) that social traditionalists would be more dogmatic and economic conservatives would be more open-minded in their respective views. The findings were consistent with those predictions.
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