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Index
Half title Title page Imprints page Dedication Contents Figures Tables Acknowledgments 1 Personality and the Foundations of Economic Preferences
Personality and Ideology Instrumental Motives Linking Personality and Politics Expressive Motives Linking Personality and Politics Choosing Whom to Believe Openness, Political Engagement, and the Reversal Effect The Importance of Cultural Conflict Overview of Chapters
2 The Psychology of Ideology
Open and Closed Research on Personality and Political Preferences
Existential Motives, Epistemic Needs, and Political Preferences Values and Moral Foundations The Big Five Traits and Politics Do Dispositional Influences on Politics Have a Biological Foundation?
Limits of Previous Research
Is the Impact of Openness Limited to Cultural Liberalism and Conservatism? How Does the Psychological Become Political?
Conclusion
3 A Dual-Pathway Model of Openness and Economic Preferences
Personality and Economic Preferences among the Politically Unengaged Openness and Economic Opinion among the Politically Engaged
Political Engagement and Self-Expression Personality and Partisan Politics From Personality to Economics: The Role of Elite Messaging
Summary The Potential for Racial and Ethnic Heterogeneity Hypotheses Conclusion
4 Testing the Reversal Hypothesis
Authoritarianism and Economic Preferences
Cross-sectional Tests in the 2000–2012 American National Election Studies Authoritarianism and Health Insurance Reform: The 1992–1994 ANES Panel Study Summary
The Need for Closure and Economic Policy Preferences Openness to Experience, Conscientiousness, and Economic Preferences Openness to Change versus Conservation and Economic Values Risk Aversion, Self-Interest, and Social Welfare Preferences Openness and Economic Preferences among Blacks and Latinos Conclusion Appendix
5 Openness and Partisan-Ideological Sorting
Authoritarianism and Political Identity
Ideological Self-Labeling Partisan and Ideological Identification A Test with Panel Data Summary
Need for Closure and Political Identity The Big Five: Openness and Conscientiousness Values: Openness to Change versus Conservation Moral Foundations and Political Identity Sources of Political Information: Media Choice and Social Networks
Political Media Choice Political Discussion Partners
Openness and Political Identity among Blacks and Latinos Conclusion Appendix
6 Openness and Elite Influence
Experimental Evidence for Partisan Cue-Taking
Partisan and Ideological Cues I: The 2011 YouGov Experiment Partisan and Ideological Cues II: The 2012 CCES Experiment
Experimental Evidence for Cultural Signaling
Personality and Cultural Signaling: The 2014 CCES Experiment Political Engagement and the Logic of Cultural Signaling: The 2015 GfK Experiment
Summary of Experimental Results Openness and International Trade
Summary
Conclusions Appendix
Covariance Structure Model for Latent Openness in the 2011 YouGov Study
7 Political Engagement and Self-Interest
Self-Interest and Policy Preferences Empirical Tests
Income, Redistribution, and Social Welfare Employment and Income Protection Government-Guaranteed and Regulated Health Insurance
Racial and Ethnic Heterogeneity Conclusions Appendix
8 Personality and American Democracy
Summary of Empirical Findings
The Reversal Effect Personality and Political Sorting The Role of Elites Political Engagement and Self-Interest Racial and Ethnic Heterogeneity
Criticisms of Our Theory and Findings
Narrow Focus on the United States Is Income or Education Responsible for the Reversal Effect? Is Personality Really Exogenous to Politics? Are Engaged Citizens Instrumental or Expressive? Why Does Openness Promote Economic Conservatism among the Unengaged?
Broader Implications
Threat Sensitivity and Uncertainty Aversion Do Not Always Promote Conservatism The Importance of the Culture War to Economic Redistribution and American Politics Why Do Working-Class Citizens Seemingly Vote Against Their Economic Interests? Is There a Coming Realignment? Expressive Motivations and Simulated Representation A Political Psychology True to Its Name
References Index
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