AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how ecological and cultural factors influence levels of prejudice around the world, highlighting that stricter cultural norms often correlate with increased prejudice.
  • Research across various nations and societies (with a large sample size of nearly 4 million) reveals that areas facing ecological threats tend to have tighter cultural norms, leading to heightened prejudice against different social groups.
  • The findings suggest that people's endorsement of cultural tightness is linked to their concerns about ecological threats, which can influence their political choices, particularly supporting nationalist politicians, while accounting for various socioeconomic factors.

Article Abstract

Prejudiced attitudes and political nationalism vary widely around the world, but there has been little research on what predicts this variation. Here we examine the ecological and cultural factors underlying the worldwide distribution of prejudice. We suggest that cultures grow more prejudiced when they tighten cultural norms in response to destabilizing ecological threats. A set of seven archival analyses, surveys, and experiments (∑N = 3,986,402) find that nations, American states, and pre-industrial societies with tighter cultural norms show the most prejudice based on skin color, religion, nationality, and sexuality, and that tightness predicts why prejudice is often highest in areas of the world with histories of ecological threat. People's support for cultural tightness also mediates the link between perceived ecological threat and intentions to vote for nationalist politicians. Results replicate when controlling for economic development, inequality, conservatism, residential mobility, and shared cultural heritage. These findings offer a cultural evolutionary perspective on prejudice, with implications for immigration, intercultural conflict, and radicalization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6730889PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221953PLOS

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