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When and Why People Prefer Higher Educated Politicians: Ingroup Bias, Deference, and Resistance

Authors :
Jochem van Noord
Toon Kuppens
Bram Spruyt
Russell Spears
Brussels Interdisciplinary Research centre on Migration and Minorities
Sociology
Tempus Omnia Revelat
Social Psychology
Source :
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 49(4), 585-599. SAGE Journals
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SAGE Publications Inc., 2023.

Abstract

When choosing between political candidates of different educational levels, do voters show ingroup bias or base their vote choice on candidates’ perceived competence? We aim to investigate how (fictional) political candidates of different educational levels are evaluated and voted for, how this is affected by voters’ educational level, and the role of perceived (Study 1) and manipulated competence (Study 2). Higher educated participants preferred higher to less educated candidates over and above their level of competence, particularly when they identified strongly with their educational level. This reflects ingroup bias among the higher educated. Less educated participants preferred higher educated candidates in Study 1, but did not prefer higher educated candidates when competence was manipulated independently from education in Study 2. The less educated, unlike the higher educated, therefore, seem to show deference to the assumed competence of the higher educated, because it disappears when more reliable competence information is available.

Subjects

Subjects :
Social Psychology

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01461672
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 49(4), 585-599. SAGE Journals
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1fda5eb363c520d5388117c1544b5841
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/01461672221077794