Using a community sample of 323 individuals (74% women; Mean Age = 26.9 years), who completed an online survey from April 2021 to April 2022, the present study explored the relations among attitudes towards a variety of social and political issues that sparked social media debate. The study used the Attitudes towards Social and Political Issues (ASPI) survey, which covers attitudes towards COVID-19, vaccines, the European Union, migrants, LGBTQ+ rights, gender equality, religion, and conspiracy beliefs. Using an Exploratory Graph Analysis, the study discovered three attitude communities. The first community, labeled equal rights & inclusion, encompassed positive attitudes towards LGBTQ+ rights and gender equality. The second community, labeled national populism, included hostility towards immigrants and anti-EU sentiments. The third community, labeled religiosity, emerged as an autonomous cluster related to national populism positively and equal rights and inclusion negatively. The ASPI scores were sensitive to individual differences in political and religious orientation. The national populism score was the most likely proxy for political orientation, while religiosity marked the difference between those who said they were Christians, or followed other religious or spiritual doctrines, and atheists or agnostics. Overall, the study provides insight into the complex social and political landscape in Italy during the Draghi government.

Between populism and egalitarianism: mapping attitudes toward social and political issues during the Draghi government using exploratory graph analysis / DI CICCO, Gabriele; Renzi, Alessia; Mariani, Rachele; Negri, Attà; DI TRANI, Michela; Lauriola, Marco. - In: PSYCHOLOGY HUB. - ISSN 2723-973X. - 40:1(2023), pp. 73-80. [10.13133/2724-2943/17982]

Between populism and egalitarianism: mapping attitudes toward social and political issues during the Draghi government using exploratory graph analysis

Gabriele Di Cicco;Alessia Renzi;Rachele Mariani;Michela Di Trani;Marco Lauriola
2023

Abstract

Using a community sample of 323 individuals (74% women; Mean Age = 26.9 years), who completed an online survey from April 2021 to April 2022, the present study explored the relations among attitudes towards a variety of social and political issues that sparked social media debate. The study used the Attitudes towards Social and Political Issues (ASPI) survey, which covers attitudes towards COVID-19, vaccines, the European Union, migrants, LGBTQ+ rights, gender equality, religion, and conspiracy beliefs. Using an Exploratory Graph Analysis, the study discovered three attitude communities. The first community, labeled equal rights & inclusion, encompassed positive attitudes towards LGBTQ+ rights and gender equality. The second community, labeled national populism, included hostility towards immigrants and anti-EU sentiments. The third community, labeled religiosity, emerged as an autonomous cluster related to national populism positively and equal rights and inclusion negatively. The ASPI scores were sensitive to individual differences in political and religious orientation. The national populism score was the most likely proxy for political orientation, while religiosity marked the difference between those who said they were Christians, or followed other religious or spiritual doctrines, and atheists or agnostics. Overall, the study provides insight into the complex social and political landscape in Italy during the Draghi government.
2023
Draghi government; egalitarianism & inclusion; gender equality; LGBTQ+ rights; right-wing populism; social and political attitudes
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Between populism and egalitarianism: mapping attitudes toward social and political issues during the Draghi government using exploratory graph analysis / DI CICCO, Gabriele; Renzi, Alessia; Mariani, Rachele; Negri, Attà; DI TRANI, Michela; Lauriola, Marco. - In: PSYCHOLOGY HUB. - ISSN 2723-973X. - 40:1(2023), pp. 73-80. [10.13133/2724-2943/17982]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1683843
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