Studia Psychologica (Apr 2019)

Role of Anxiety in Radicalizing Political Attitudes: Experimental Evidence from Slovakia

  • Pavol Baboš,
  • Aneta Világi,
  • Petra Soláriková

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21909/sp.2019.01.771
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 61, no. 1
pp. 42 – 55

Abstract

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Proliferation of populist policies and strengthening of political populism in several liberal democracies has been accompanied by campaigns full of public anger, anxiety and fear. Our research contributes to understanding how negative emotions shape selected political attitudes. We designed an experiment with 72 participants randomly assigned to three groups. The aim was to impose anxiety by using a stimulus that is incidental, i.e. having unrelated content to the attitudes under study. In addition to self-reported emotional state measured by post-test survey, we also measured the heart rate activity. Regarding political attitudes, next to attitudes towards immigrants we measured attitudes towards marijuana decriminalization as well. Findings indicate that while imposed anxiety leads to more negative attitudes towards immigrants, there seems to be no such effect on attitudes towards marijuana. We explain the difference by presence/absence of the in-group/out-group division in the types of political attitudes under study.

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