The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat

The current research investigates how the perceived emotional responses of a majority of Americans to 9/11 (i.e., collective anger and fear) affect individuals’ support for governmental policies, in particular, military intervention, anti-immigration policy, and restricting civil liberties. Study 1...

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Main Author: Kim, Jaeshin
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3397719
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-56272020-12-02T14:26:07Z The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat Kim, Jaeshin The current research investigates how the perceived emotional responses of a majority of Americans to 9/11 (i.e., collective anger and fear) affect individuals’ support for governmental policies, in particular, military intervention, anti-immigration policy, and restricting civil liberties. Study 1 found that perceived collective anger was associated with support for military intervention and anti-immigration policy, and that those effects of perceived collective anger on policy support were significantly driven by individuals’ own anger. Study 2 showed that experimentally manipulated collective anger (i.e., exposure to the majority’s anger relative to the minority’s anger) had marginal effects on support for anti-immigration policy and restricting civil liberties, and individuals’ own anger mediated the marginal effect of collective anger on support for restricting civil liberties. Participants exposed to either the majority’s or minority’s fear supported anti-immigration policy and restricting civil liberties as strongly as did those exposed to the majority’s anger. Implications and limitations of these findings were discussed. 2010-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3397719 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Social psychology|Psychology
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Social psychology|Psychology
spellingShingle Social psychology|Psychology
Kim, Jaeshin
The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
description The current research investigates how the perceived emotional responses of a majority of Americans to 9/11 (i.e., collective anger and fear) affect individuals’ support for governmental policies, in particular, military intervention, anti-immigration policy, and restricting civil liberties. Study 1 found that perceived collective anger was associated with support for military intervention and anti-immigration policy, and that those effects of perceived collective anger on policy support were significantly driven by individuals’ own anger. Study 2 showed that experimentally manipulated collective anger (i.e., exposure to the majority’s anger relative to the minority’s anger) had marginal effects on support for anti-immigration policy and restricting civil liberties, and individuals’ own anger mediated the marginal effect of collective anger on support for restricting civil liberties. Participants exposed to either the majority’s or minority’s fear supported anti-immigration policy and restricting civil liberties as strongly as did those exposed to the majority’s anger. Implications and limitations of these findings were discussed.
author Kim, Jaeshin
author_facet Kim, Jaeshin
author_sort Kim, Jaeshin
title The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
title_short The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
title_full The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
title_fullStr The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
title_full_unstemmed The role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
title_sort role of perceived collective anger and fear on policy support in response to terrorist threat
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2010
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3397719
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