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Investigating the Links Between Cultural Values and Belief in Conspiracy Theories: The key roles of collectivism and masculinity

Authors :
Troian, Jais-Adam
Wagner-Egger, Pascal
Motyl, Matt
Arciszewski, Thomas
Imhoff, Roland
Zimmer, Felix
Klein, Olivier
Babinska, Maria
Bangerter, Adrian
Bilewicz, Michal
Banusa, Nebosja
Bovan, Kosta
Buzarovska, Rumena
Cichocka, Aleksandra
Cilebi, Elif
Delouvée, Sylvain
Douglas, Karen
Dyrendal, Asbjorn
Gjoneska, Biljana
Graf, Sylvie
Gualda, Estrella
Hirschberger, Gilad
Kende, Anna
Kreko, Peter
Lamberty, Pia
Krouwel, André
Mari, Silvia
Milosevic Dordevic, Jasna
Panasati, Maria Serena
Pantazi, Myrto
Petkovski, Lusjo
Porciello, Giuseppina
Prims, JP
Rabelo, André
Schepisi, Michael
Sutton, Robbie
Thorisdottir, Hulda
Swami, Viren
Turcajanin, Vladimir
Žeželj, Iris
Van Prooijen, Jan-Willem
Troian, Jais-Adam
Wagner-Egger, Pascal
Motyl, Matt
Arciszewski, Thomas
Imhoff, Roland
Zimmer, Felix
Klein, Olivier
Babinska, Maria
Bangerter, Adrian
Bilewicz, Michal
Banusa, Nebosja
Bovan, Kosta
Buzarovska, Rumena
Cichocka, Aleksandra
Cilebi, Elif
Delouvée, Sylvain
Douglas, Karen
Dyrendal, Asbjorn
Gjoneska, Biljana
Graf, Sylvie
Gualda, Estrella
Hirschberger, Gilad
Kende, Anna
Kreko, Peter
Lamberty, Pia
Krouwel, André
Mari, Silvia
Milosevic Dordevic, Jasna
Panasati, Maria Serena
Pantazi, Myrto
Petkovski, Lusjo
Porciello, Giuseppina
Prims, JP
Rabelo, André
Schepisi, Michael
Sutton, Robbie
Thorisdottir, Hulda
Swami, Viren
Turcajanin, Vladimir
Žeželj, Iris
Van Prooijen, Jan-Willem
Source :
Political psychology, 42 (4
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Research suggests that belief in conspiracy theories (CT) stems from basic psychological mechanisms and is linked to other belief systems (e.g. religious beliefs). While previous research has extensively examined individual and contextual variables associated with CT beliefs, it has not yet investigated the role of culture. In the current research, we tested, based on a situated cultural cognition perspective, the extent to which culture predicts CT beliefs. Using Hofstede’s model of cultural values, three nation-level analyses of data from 25, 19 and 18 countries using different measures of CT beliefs (Study 1, N = 5,323; Study 2a, N = 12,255; Study 2b, N = 30,994) revealed positive associations between Masculinity, Collectivism and CT beliefs. A cross-sectional study among US citizens (Study 3, N = 350), using individual-level measures of Hofstede’s values, replicated these findings. A meta-analysis of correlations across studies corroborated the presence of positive links between CT beliefs, Collectivism, r = .31, 95%CI = [.15; 47] and Masculinity, r = .39, 95%CI = [.18; 59]. Our results suggest that in addition to individual-differences and contextual variables, cultural factors also play an important role in shaping CT beliefs.<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Political psychology, 42 (4
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, French
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1202447039
Document Type :
Electronic Resource