Matteo C. M. Casiraghi, L. Curini, N. Maggini, Alessandro Nai
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引用次数: 0
摘要
不同意识形态观点的选民在多大程度上支持国家干预以遏制危机,这仍然是一个存在矛盾证据的突出难题。在这篇文章中,我们检验了解决这一难题的两种可能途径。我们认为,意识形态在解释对国家干预的支持方面所起的作用可能是:(i) 以危机本身的意识形态性质为条件(例如,危机是否与节约型价值观和后物质主义价值观有关),或者 (ii) 通过调节政治信任所起的作用而间接展开。我们在 2022 年对具有代表性的 1000 个意大利公民样本进行了联合实验,询问受访者是否支持政府在不同条件(如危机类型、严重程度)下为遏制危机而采取的特定干预措施。我们的结果表明,危机类型的影响微乎其微--只有在恐怖主义的情况下,右翼受访者才更有可能支持国家干预。更重要的是,政治信任会影响支持国家干预的概率,但这只针对右翼公民。
Who looks up to the Leviathan? Ideology, political trust, and support for restrictive state interventions in times of crisis
The extent in which voters from different ideological viewpoints support state interventions to curb crises remains an outstanding conundrum, marred by conflicting evidence. In this article, we test two possible ways out from such puzzle. The role of ideology to explain support for state interventions, we argue, could be (i) conditional upon the ideological nature of the crisis itself (e.g., whether the crisis relates to conservation vs. post-materialist values), or (ii) unfolding indirectly, by moderating the role played by political trust. We present evidence from a conjoint experiment fielded in 2022 on a representative sample of 1,000 Italian citizens, in which respondents were asked whether they support specific governmental interventions to curb a crisis, described under different conditions (e.g., type of crisis, severity). Our results show that the type of crisis matters marginally – right-wing respondents were more likely to support state interventions only in the case of terrorism. More fundamentally, political trust affects the probability to support state interventions, but only for right-wing citizens.