Ideology and the promotion of social change

Publication date: August 2020Source: Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences, Volume 34Author(s): Julia C BeckerMost models predicting collective action for social change have not considered the role of ideology. Recent research suggests, however, that ideology is a key variable in predicting social change efforts by illustrating that conservatives are more likely to resist whereas liberals are more likely to promote social change. In this review, I bring two lines of research together showing that not ony liberals but also right-wing populists are interested in collective action for social change. I introduce an integrative framework that endeavors to clarify the relation between ideology and social change by taking the content of socio-political issues into account. I propose that the distinction between progressive and reactionary social change can help to connect different social change intentions with its underlying ideological antecedents.
Source: Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research
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