1 University of Auckland, New Zealand.
2 Marbella International University Centre, Spain.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2017 Aug;43(8):1086-1099. doi: 10.1177/0146167217704196. Epub 2017 May 6.
The resurgence of right-wing political parties across the globe raises questions about the origins of national identity. Based on the Dual Process Model of Ideology and Prejudice, we argue that people's tendency to submit to ingroup authorities (Right-Wing Authoritarianism [RWA]) and preference for group-based hierarchy (Social Dominance Orientation [SDO]) underlie people's belief in the superiority of their nation (nationalism) and attachment to their homeland (patriotism). We examine these hypotheses using three waves of data from an annually conducted national longitudinal panel study of New Zealanders ( N = 3,838). As predicted, RWA had positive cross-lagged effects on nationalism and patriotism. Conversely, SDO had a positive cross-lagged effect on nationalism, but a negative cross-lagged effect on patriotism. Little evidence of reciprocal cross-lagged effects (i.e., national identity on authoritarianism) was found. These results demonstrate that nationalism and patriotism are related, albeit distinct, ways of identifying with one's nation that are ultimately rooted in authoritarianism.
全球右翼政党的复兴引发了人们对民族认同起源的质疑。基于意识形态和偏见的双重过程模型,我们认为,人们倾向于服从群体权威(右翼威权主义)和偏好基于群体的等级制度(社会支配取向),这是人们相信自己民族优越性(民族主义)和对祖国的依恋(爱国主义)的基础。我们使用新西兰人每年进行的一次全国纵向面板研究的三波数据来检验这些假设(N=3838)。正如预测的那样,右翼威权主义对民族主义和爱国主义有积极的跨期影响。相反,社会支配取向对民族主义有积极的跨期影响,但对爱国主义有消极的跨期影响。几乎没有证据表明存在相互的跨期影响(即,威权主义对民族认同的影响)。这些结果表明,民族主义和爱国主义是相互关联的,但又有区别,是认同自己民族的方式,最终根植于威权主义。