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The moral dimension of politicized identity: Exploring identity content during the 2012 Presidential Elections in the USA
Author(s) -
TurnerZwinkels Felicity M.,
Zomeren Martijn,
Postmes Tom
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
british journal of social psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 2044-8309
pISSN - 0144-6665
DOI - 10.1111/bjso.12171
Subject(s) - presidential system , identity (music) , dimension (graph theory) , content (measure theory) , social psychology , psychology , sociology , political science , politics , law , mathematics , aesthetics , combinatorics , philosophy , mathematical analysis
It is well known that politicized identities are especially good predictors of collective action, but very little is known about what these identities are. We propose that moral identity content plays a central role in politicized identities. We examined this among (un)politicized Americans in the 2012 US Presidential Elections. In a longitudinal community sample of US citizens ( N = 760), we tracked personal (i.e., unique) and politicized (i.e., party activist) identity content: before, during, and after the election. We compared identity content of individuals who self‐labelled as politicized (i.e., active party promoters) or unpoliticized (i.e., passive party supporters): (1) Democrats ( n = 69) longitudinally and (2) Republicans ( n = 69) cross‐sectionally to examine three hypotheses: Moral identity content (e.g., trustworthy) would be more prominent in politicized (vs. unpoliticized) identities (H1); moral identity content overlapping politicized and personal identities predict seeing the self as politicized (H2) and engaging in party activism (H3). Results largely supported H1 and H2, but only weakly supported H3. We conclude that politicized identities are moralized identities that have a self‐evaluative, but not strongly action‐motivation, function. We discuss the implications of our findings and method for politicization research.