Authors
Gian Vittorio Caprara, Michele Vecchione, Shalom H Schwartz, Harald Schoen, Paul G Bain, Jo Silvester, Jan Cieciuch, Vassilis Pavlopoulos, Gabriel Bianchi, Hasan Kirmanoglu, Cem Baslevent, Cătălin Mamali, Jorge Manzi, Miyuki Katayama, Tetyana Posnova, Carmen Tabernero, Claudio Torres, Markku Verkasalo, Jan-Erik Lönnqvist, Eva Vondráková, Maria Giovanna Caprara
Publication date
2017/10
Journal
Cross-Cultural Research
Volume
51
Issue
4
Pages
388-411
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
The current study examines the contribution of left–right (or liberal–conservative) ideology to voting, as well as the extent to which basic values account for ideological orientation. Analyses were conducted in 16 countries from five continents (Europe, North America, South America, Asia, and Oceania), most of which have been neglected by previous studies. Results showed that left–right (or liberal–conservative) ideology predicted voting in all countries except Ukraine. Basic values exerted a considerable effect in predicting ideology in most countries, especially in established democracies such as Australia, Finland, Italy, United Kingdom, and Germany. Pattern of relations with the whole set of 10 values revealed that the critical trade-off underlying ideology is between values concerned with tolerance and protection for the welfare of all people (universalism) versus values concerned with preserving the social order …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
GV Caprara, M Vecchione, SH Schwartz, H Schoen… - Cross-Cultural Research, 2017