Taking Foreign Policy Personally: Personal Values and Foreign Policy Attitudes
Author(s) -
Brian C. Rathbun,
Joshua D. Kertzer,
Jason Reifler,
Paul Goren,
Thomas J. Scotto
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.897
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1468-2478
pISSN - 0020-8833
DOI - 10.1093/isq/sqv012
Subject(s) - foreign policy , internationalism (politics) , international relations , universalism , foreign policy analysis , cosmopolitanism , politics , foreign relations , political science , political economy , value (mathematics) , sociology , positive economics , law , economics , machine learning , computer science
Previous research shows that, when it comes to foreign policy, individuals have general orientations that inform their beliefs toward more specific issues in international relations. But such studies evade an even more important question: what gives rise to such foreign-policy orientations in the first place? Combining an original survey on a nationally representative sample of Americans with Schwartz’s theory of values from political psychology, we show that people take foreign policy personally: the same basic values that people use to guide choices in their daily lives also travel to the domain of foreign affairs. Conservation values are most strongly linked to “militant internationalism,” a general hawkishness in international relations. The value of universalism is the most important value for predicting “cooperative internationalism,” the foreignpolicy orientation marked by a preference for multilateralism and cosmopolitanism in international affairs. This relatively parsimonious and elegant system of values and foreign-policy beliefs is consistent across both high- and low-knowledge respondents, offering one potential explanation for why those people who are otherwise uninformed about world politics nonetheless express coherent foreign-policy beliefs
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