Political orientation, trust and discriminatory beliefs during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Longitudinal evidence from the United Kingdom

Author:

Frackowiak Michal12ORCID,Russell Pascale Sophie3,Rusconi Patrice4,Fasoli Fabio3,Cohen‐Chen Smadar5

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Psychology, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

2. imec‐mict‐UGent, Department of Communication Sciences Ghent University Ghent Belgium

3. School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Surrey Guildford UK

4. Department of Cognitive Sciences, Psychology, Education and Cultural Studies University of Messina Messina Italy

5. Business School University of Sussex Brighton UK

Abstract

AbstractThe COVID‐19 pandemic has impacted the world in many ways; for example, evidence from the United Kingdom indicates that higher rates of discriminatory behaviours against immigrants have been recorded during this period. Prior research suggests that political orientation and trust are instrumental in discriminatory beliefs against immigrants. A longitudinal study (six waves and a follow‐up) was conducted in the United Kingdom during the COVID‐19 pandemic (September 2020–August 2021) using convenience sampling (N = 383). The hypotheses enquired about whether political orientation predicts trust in government, trust in science and discriminatory beliefs. Multilevel regression and mediation analyses were conducted, using repeated measures nested within individuals. It was found that conservative views are associated with higher discriminatory beliefs, lower trust in science and higher trust in government. Furthermore, trust in science promotes reduction of discrimination, whereas trust in government, increases discriminatory beliefs. However, a nuance revealed by an interaction effect, shows that a positive alignment between political and scientific authorities may be required to reduce prejudice against immigrants. Exploratory multilevel mediation showed that trust is a mediator between political orientation and discriminatory beliefs.

Funder

British Academy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

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