Research Articles

The Psychological Spectrum: Political Orientation and its Origins in Perception and Culture

Authors:

Abstract

Rightists need difference,

Leftists, similarity;

But both need culture.

In this paper I employ a simple methodological innovation to test the relationships between political orientation, perception and culture. Previous studies have indicated that right-wing policy stances are related to the wish to sustain order and hierarchy and to disgust sensitivity, and that left-wing policy stances reflect a need for novelty, equality and autonomy. This relationship is not universally constant, however, but varies between cultural environments. Previous literature is limited by its reliance on Western convenience samples, a bias against scrutiny of the political left, and a lack of cross-cultural and cross-situational comparisons. Use of representative survey data for this purpose has been hindered by the lack of psychological variables. I overcome this difficulty by producing a new psychometric measure, an average measure of the extent to which individuals provide polarised responses to Likert scales. Using this variable in an analysis of Wave 6 of the World Values Survey, I find evidence to support the claim that political opinions are intimately linked with classification of similarity and difference, and with cultural context.

Keywords:

ideologyperceptionpoliticsopinionpsychologyculture
  • Year: 2018
  • Volume: 1 Issue: 1
  • Page/Article: 2
  • DOI: 10.22599/ujpir.25
  • Submitted on 16 Jul 2016
  • Accepted on 23 Jan 2017
  • Published on 13 Mar 2018
  • Peer Reviewed