Populist attitudes and conspiratorial thinking

عنوان Populist attitudes and conspiratorial thinking
نویسنده Paker, Evren Balta, Kaltwasser, C. R., Yagci, A. H.
تاریخ انتشار: 2022-07
محل انتشار - Sage
موضوع Comparative politics, Conspiracy theory, Democracy, Populism, Turkey, Voting behavior
نوع دوره ای
زبان انگلیسی
دیجیتال بله
نسخه خطی خیر
کتابخانه: دانشگاه اوزیغین
شناسه دارایی کتابخانه 1354-0688
شماره ثبت dfe2f13d-aae4-40e1-a089-f1958721a4c5
محل کتابخانه International Relations
تاریخ 2022-07
یادداشت‌ها Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT Project) ; Observatory for Socioeconomic Transformations (ANID/PCI/Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies)
متن نمونه What happens to the anti-establishment sentiments of pro-incumbent voters for a populist force that is in government and thus controls the political system? This article examines this question utilizing the case of Turkey, a country in which a populist force has been in power for more than a decade. By analyzing populist attitudes among a nationally representative sample, we demonstrate that while the voters of the incumbent populist party (AKP) are less likely, compared to everyone else, to hold populist sentiments, the same voters are also substantially more likely to endorse conspiracy theories that center on malign foreign powers. This finding is relevant beyond Turkey, because it demonstrates that populist forces might be able to maintain popular support and thus stay in power for a long stretch of time by employing government propaganda to fuel an antagonism against conspiratorial foreign and global forces.
DOI 10.1177/13540688211003304
Cilt 28
مشاهده در منبع دانشگاه اوزیغین Özyeğin Üniversitesi
Özyeğin Üniversitesi دانشگاه اوزیغین

Populist attitudes and conspiratorial thinking

نویسنده Paker, Evren Balta, Kaltwasser, C. R., Yagci, A. H.
تاریخ انتشار 2022-07
محل انتشار - Sage
موضوع Comparative politics, Conspiracy theory, Democracy, Populism, Turkey, Voting behavior
نوع دوره ای
زبان انگلیسی
دیجیتال بله
نسخه خطی خیر
کتابخانه دانشگاه اوزیغین
شناسه دارایی کتابخانه 1354-0688
شماره ثبت dfe2f13d-aae4-40e1-a089-f1958721a4c5
محل کتابخانه International Relations
تاریخ 2022-07
یادداشت‌ها Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT Project) ; Observatory for Socioeconomic Transformations (ANID/PCI/Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies)
متن نمونه What happens to the anti-establishment sentiments of pro-incumbent voters for a populist force that is in government and thus controls the political system? This article examines this question utilizing the case of Turkey, a country in which a populist force has been in power for more than a decade. By analyzing populist attitudes among a nationally representative sample, we demonstrate that while the voters of the incumbent populist party (AKP) are less likely, compared to everyone else, to hold populist sentiments, the same voters are also substantially more likely to endorse conspiracy theories that center on malign foreign powers. This finding is relevant beyond Turkey, because it demonstrates that populist forces might be able to maintain popular support and thus stay in power for a long stretch of time by employing government propaganda to fuel an antagonism against conspiratorial foreign and global forces.
DOI 10.1177/13540688211003304
Cilt 28
Özyeğin Üniversitesi
دانشگاه اوزیغین شما در حال هدایت مجدد هستید...

لطفاً صبر کنید