The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties

A key aspect of citizenship lies in the way that ordinary citizens relate to leaders, and a key question has to do with whether active leadership and active citizenship can be complementary rather than contradictory. In this paper we draw upon a social identity model in order to address this questio...

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Main Authors: Lucia Botindari, Stephen D. Reicher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2015-10-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/413
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spelling doaj-81961b47b8644776a15c1e57ea75acd72020-11-25T03:00:05ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252015-10-013210713010.5964/jspp.v3i2.413jspp.v3i2.413The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and PartiesLucia Botindari0Stephen D. Reicher1School of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, United KingdomSchool of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, United KingdomA key aspect of citizenship lies in the way that ordinary citizens relate to leaders, and a key question has to do with whether active leadership and active citizenship can be complementary rather than contradictory. In this paper we draw upon a social identity model in order to address this question. We report a study of 28 young Italians who completed a diary before and after the Italian general election of 2006. The analysis focuses on the criteria used by respondents in order to evaluate leaders and their parties. The first part, an in-depth thematic investigation of two diaries, shows that the diarists do not passively accept the constructions used by politicians, but rather deliberate both over their own identities and the way that politicians relate to these identities. They focus on three dimensions of the leader-citizen relationship: whether leaders are ingroup members ('one of us'), whether they act in the group interest ('act for us') and whether they are effective in advancing group goals ('deliver for us'). The second part consists of a quantitative content analysis, examining whether, and how often, each respondent raises these three dimensions. It shows that they are widely used and that the predominant concern is whether leaders 'deliver for us'. We examine the implications of these findings for both leadership and citizenship research, arguing that both leaders and citizens can be actively involved in shaping definitions of identity and the extent to which identity based goals are realised by parties and their policies.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/413citizenshipleadershipsocial identityvoting behaviour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Botindari
Stephen D. Reicher
spellingShingle Lucia Botindari
Stephen D. Reicher
The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
citizenship
leadership
social identity
voting behaviour
author_facet Lucia Botindari
Stephen D. Reicher
author_sort Lucia Botindari
title The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
title_short The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
title_full The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
title_fullStr The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
title_full_unstemmed The Active Follower: What Young Voters Look for in Political Leaders and Parties
title_sort active follower: what young voters look for in political leaders and parties
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2015-10-01
description A key aspect of citizenship lies in the way that ordinary citizens relate to leaders, and a key question has to do with whether active leadership and active citizenship can be complementary rather than contradictory. In this paper we draw upon a social identity model in order to address this question. We report a study of 28 young Italians who completed a diary before and after the Italian general election of 2006. The analysis focuses on the criteria used by respondents in order to evaluate leaders and their parties. The first part, an in-depth thematic investigation of two diaries, shows that the diarists do not passively accept the constructions used by politicians, but rather deliberate both over their own identities and the way that politicians relate to these identities. They focus on three dimensions of the leader-citizen relationship: whether leaders are ingroup members ('one of us'), whether they act in the group interest ('act for us') and whether they are effective in advancing group goals ('deliver for us'). The second part consists of a quantitative content analysis, examining whether, and how often, each respondent raises these three dimensions. It shows that they are widely used and that the predominant concern is whether leaders 'deliver for us'. We examine the implications of these findings for both leadership and citizenship research, arguing that both leaders and citizens can be actively involved in shaping definitions of identity and the extent to which identity based goals are realised by parties and their policies.
topic citizenship
leadership
social identity
voting behaviour
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/413
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