Judgment and Decision Making (Jun 2008)

Liberal-conservative differences in inclusion-exclusion strategy choice

  • John D. Jasper,
  • Daniel Ansted

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1930297500000449
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
pp. 417 – 424

Abstract

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Inclusion and exclusion strategies for allocation of scarce goods involve different processes. The conditions under which one strategy is chosen in favor of the other, however, have not been fully explicated. In the present study, decision makers chose a single strategy after reading through descriptions of 16 potential organ recipients; they then narrowed the list of transplant candidates. Most liberals chose to use exclusion under conditions of abundance and inclusion under scarcity. In contrast, conservatives preferred an inclusion strategy under abundance and exclusion (though not significantly) under scarcity. Theoretical implications as well as ongoing work in inclusion-exclusion strategy choice, political ideology, and distributive justice are discussed.

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