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Robert Klemmensen, black and white photo.

Robert Klemmensen

Assistant Head of Department (Coordination of Research) | Professor

Robert Klemmensen, black and white photo.

Genetic and environmental influences on the stability of political attitudes

Author

  • Stig HR Rasmussen
  • Aaron Weinschenk
  • Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz
  • Jacob B.H. Hjelmborg
  • Asbjørn Sonne Nørgaard
  • Robert Klemmensen

Summary, in English

It has been established across several contexts that political attitudes are informed by heritable factors. However, it remains unclear how much of the stability we observe in political attitudes can be ascribed to environmental factors and how much of the stability is due to genetics. In this paper we show, using a unique three-wave panel dataset of twins (N = 2471) spanning ten years, that both environmental and genetic influences are important in explaining the stability of social and economic ideology. However, we find that changes in ideology over time are explained by environmental factors for both social and economic ideology. For social ideology, only the shared environment is important in explaining changes over time. For economic ideology, both shared and unique environmental factors influence changes over time. Our results suggest that stability and change in political attitudes is a complex phenomenon that is best understood when examining heritable as well as social factors.

Department/s

  • Department of Political Science
  • LU Profile Area: Natural and Artificial Cognition

Publishing year

2024

Language

English

Publication/Series

Personality and Individual Differences

Volume

229

Issue

October 2024

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Political Science

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-3549