José J. Pizarro
Sociopolitical consequences of COVID‐19 in the Americas, Europe, and Asia: A multilevel, multicountry investigation of risk perceptions and support for antidemocratic practices
Pizarro, José J.; Cakal, Huseyin; Méndez, Lander; Zumeta, Larraitz N.; Gracia‐Leiva, Marcela; Basabe, Nekane; Navarro‐Carrillo, Ginés; Cazan, Ana‐Maria; Keshavarzi, Saeed; López‐López, Wilson; Yahiiaiev, Illia; Alzugaray‐Ponce, Carolina; Villagrán, Loreto; Moyano‐Díaz, Emilio; Petrović, Nebojša; Mathias, Anderson; Techio, Elza M.; Wlodarczyk, Anna; Alfaro‐Beracoechea, Laura; Ibarra, Manuel L.; Michael, Andreas; Mhaskar, Sumeet; Martínez‐Zelaya, Gonzalo; Bilbao, Marian; Delfino, Gisela; Carvalho, Catarina L.; Pinto, Isabel R.; Mohsin, Falak Zehra; Espinosa, Agustín; Cueto, Rosa María; Cavalli, Stefano; da Costa, Silvia; Amutio, Alberto; Alonso‐Arbiol, Itziar; Páez, Darío
Authors
Huseyin Cakal h.cakal@keele.ac.uk
Lander Méndez
Larraitz N. Zumeta
Marcela Gracia‐Leiva
Nekane Basabe
Ginés Navarro‐Carrillo
Ana‐Maria Cazan
Saeed Keshavarzi
Wilson López‐López
Illia Yahiiaiev
Carolina Alzugaray‐Ponce
Loreto Villagrán
Emilio Moyano‐Díaz
Nebojša Petrović
Anderson Mathias
Elza M. Techio
Anna Wlodarczyk
Laura Alfaro‐Beracoechea
Manuel L. Ibarra
Andreas Michael
Sumeet Mhaskar
Gonzalo Martínez‐Zelaya
Marian Bilbao
Gisela Delfino
Catarina L. Carvalho
Isabel R. Pinto
Falak Zehra Mohsin
Agustín Espinosa
Rosa María Cueto
Stefano Cavalli
Silvia da Costa
Alberto Amutio
Itziar Alonso‐Arbiol
Darío Páez
Abstract
Although different social crises may eventually favor undemocratic and authoritarian forms of governance, at some point, such antidemocratic practices require the support of a significant part of the population to be implemented. The present research investigates how and whether the COVID‐19 pandemic might have favoured greater support for antidemocratic governmental practices, on the premise of regaining control and security. Using data from 17 countries (N = 4364) and national‐level indicators (i.e., real number of contagions and deaths, and sociopolitical indicators), we test how the risk of contagion and death from COVID‐19, along with personal orientations (i.e., social dominance orientation [SDO], right‐wing authoritarianism [RWA], and perceived anomie) motivate authoritarian and antidemocratic practices. Results from multilevel models indicate that risk perception and perceptions of political instability predict a wish for stronger leadership, agreement with martial law, and support for a controlling government especially when SDO and RWA are high, while more egalitarian and less conservative people agree less with these authoritarian measures in spite of the levels of risk perception. We discuss the implications for these findings for future research on similar but also dissimilar external events (natural disasters, war, or terror incidents) and the consequences for societies with higher authoritarian tendencies.
Citation
Pizarro, J. J., Cakal, H., Méndez, L., Zumeta, L. N., Gracia‐Leiva, M., Basabe, N., …Páez, D. (in press). Sociopolitical consequences of COVID‐19 in the Americas, Europe, and Asia: A multilevel, multicountry investigation of risk perceptions and support for antidemocratic practices. Political Psychology, https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12930
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Oct 17, 2023 |
Online Publication Date | Oct 17, 2023 |
Deposit Date | Oct 23, 2023 |
Journal | Political Psychology |
Print ISSN | 0162-895X |
Electronic ISSN | 1467-9221 |
Publisher | Wiley |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12930 |
Keywords | risk perception, SDO, RWA, authoritarianism, antidemocratic practices, COVID‐19 |
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