Author:
ALFORD JOHN R.,FUNK CAROLYN L.,HIBBING JOHN R.
Abstract
We test the possibility that political attitudes and behaviors are the result of both environmental and genetic factors. Employing standard methodological approaches in behavioral genetics—specifically, comparisons of the differential correlations of the attitudes of monozygotic twins and dizygotic twins—we analyze data drawn from a large sample of twins in the United States, supplemented with findings from twins in Australia. The results indicate that genetics plays an important role in shaping political attitudes and ideologies but a more modest role in forming party identification; as such, they call for finer distinctions in theorizing about the sources of political attitudes. We conclude by urging political scientists to incorporate genetic influences, specifically interactions between genetic heritability and social environment, into models of political attitude formation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference72 articles.
1. Eaves L. J. , N. G. Martin , and A. C. Heath .1990.“Religious Affiliation in Twins and Their Parents.”Behavior Genetics 20 (January):1–22.
2. Adorno Theodore W. , Else Frenkel-Brunswik , Daniel Levinson , and R. N. Sanford .1950.The Authoritarian Personality.New York:Harper.
3. Sears David O. 1989.“Whither Political Socialization Research? The Question of Persistence.”In Political Socialization, Citizenship Education, and Democracy,ed. O. Ichilov .New York:Teachers College Press.
4. Gould Stephen Jay .2000.“More Things in Heaven and Earth.”In Alas, Poor Darwin,ed. Hillary Rose and Steven Rose .New York:Harmony Books.
5. Tesser A .1993.“The Importance of Heritability in Psychological Research: The Case of Attitudes.”Psychological Review 100 (January):129–42.
Cited by
686 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献