Possibility Space of Ideological Change

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Exploring the state space of ideological possibility Matto Mildenberger Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies

29 March 2012 Waterloo Institute for Complexity and Innovation


1. Approaching the study of ideology II. Mapping the ideological state space III. The determinants of ideological attachment IV. Towards a theory of ideological change


Approaches to the study of ideology

• •

The rise and fall and rise of ideology Persistent divides:

• • •

Causal vs. descriptive IV vs. DV Individual vs. Group

Conceptualizing an ideological “state space”


System of ideas, beliefs and values used in a community to understand, justify, or challenge its social, political, and economic arrangements.


One-dimensional state space

right

left

conservative

liberal


One-dimensional state space advocating for change

accepting social inequality

rejecting social inequality

resisting change

Jost 2009


Two-dimensional state space high harmony high grid high SDO high freedom tough-mindedness

low group conservatism low equality high RWA high security

fatalists dualists

hierarchs harmony-oriented

individualists security-oriented

egalitarians moral relativists

high group radicalism high equality low RWA low security

Rokeach 1973

low SDO low freedom tender-mindedness low harmony low grid

Eysenck 1954 Sibley & Duckitt 2008 Braithwaite 1997 Douglas 1970


Two-dimensional state space

Inglehart 2010


Multi-dimensional state space

Moral foundations theory (Haidt 2012)

• • • • • •

harm/care fairness/reciprocity

low binding high freedom

ingroup/loyalty libertarianism

secular liberals

authority/respect

high individuating high equality

purity/sanctity liberty/oppression

social conservatism

religious left


Multi-dimensional state space

Cultural dimensions theory (Hofstede 2001)

• • • • • •

power distance (degree of social inequality) uncertainty avoidance individualism vs. collectivism masculinity vs. femininity long-term vs. short-term orientation + indulgence vs. restraint


On the nature of dimensions

• bivariate vs. bipolar • “criterial referents” (Kerlinger 1967) • cognitive predispositions • symmetry vs. asymmetry • do ideologies have dimensional structure?


Determinants of ideological attachment

• • •

Genetic Physiological Psychological


Cognition & Affect

Positive predictors of conservatism: death anxiety, system instability, intolerance of ambiguity, fear of threat (Jost 2003)

Negative predictors: openness to experience, uncertainty tolerance, needs for order structure and closure, integrative complexity

Morality

Personality


Determinants of ideological attachment

• • • • • •

Genetic Physiological Psychological Material Social Political


Towards a theory of ideological change

Cross-scale theories of ideological attachment

• •

Elective affinities (top down vs. bottom up) Three level account of personality

Level 1: dispositional traits (decontextualized biological and psychological factors, from genetics to personality)

Level 2: characteristic adaptations (including goals, values and context-sensitive traits)

Level 3: narrative identities (ideologies)


Migration through the ideological state space • • •

Induced changes by threat, mortality, uncertainty Ideological persistence The effects of “new” dimensions


For a draft copy of the report, contact: matto.mildenberger@yale.edu


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