Ecological and cultural factors underlying the global distribution of prejudice

PLOS ONE Vol/Iss. 14(9) Public Library of Science Published In Pages: e0221953
By Jackson, Joshua C., van Egmond, Marieke, Choi, Virginia K., Ember, Carol R., Halberstadt, Jasmin, Balanovic, Jovana, Basker, Inger N., Boehnke, Klaus, Buki, Noemi, Fischer, Ronald, Fülöp, Marta, Fulmer, Ashley, Homan, Astrid C., van Kleef, Gerben A., Kreemers, Loes, Schei, Vidar, Szabo, Erna, Ward, Colleen, Gelfand, Michele J.

Hypothesis

Ecological threats, prejudice, and cultural tightness will be positively associated with the support of nationalist political candidates.

Note

The researchers surveyed 562 Americans during the US 2016 elections and 320 French respondents during the France 2017 elections. Intentions to vote for Donald Trump is associated with perceived threat (p=.007), cultural tightness (p<.001), and prejudice (p<.001). Intentions to vote for Marine LePen is associated with perceived threat (p=.02), cultural tightness (p<.001), and prejudice (p<.001).

Test

Test NameSupportSignificanceCoefficientTail
Multi-level regression analysesSupportedUNKNOWNUNKNOWNUNKNOWN