Personality’s effect on European identification

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.17, No.3, September 2016, p429-456
Publication Date September 2016
ISSN 1465-1165
Content Type

Abstract:

A superordinate identity improves intergroup relations and bolsters support for the political system. Yet, why do only some identify superordinately? I argue that personality is an important determinant. I test this using an original survey in the United Kingdom, where European Union integration has increased the salience and feasibility of the “European” identity option in addition to a national one. Several Big Five traits matter: openness and extraversion increase identification with Europe while agreeableness decreases it. Mediation analysis subsequently shows that personality’s effects also travel through the mechanisms of risk aversion, knowledge, and ideology. Results imply that certain predispositions prompt some to be more receptive than others to seeing themselves in superordinate terms and that European identification may be at least partly more primordial than previously thought.

Source Link Link to Main Source http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1465116516635754
Subject Categories
Countries / Regions