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Antisemitism is predicted by anti-hierarchical aggression, totalitarianism, and belief in malevolent global conspiracies

Political Science

Antisemitism is predicted by anti-hierarchical aggression, totalitarianism, and belief in malevolent global conspiracies

D. Allington, D. Hirsh, et al.

Exploring the roots of antisemitism in the UK, researchers Daniel Allington, David Hirsh, and Louise Katz reveal intriguing connections to conspiratorial beliefs and authoritarian preferences. Their studies highlight how various ideological predictors shape both 'old' and 'new' antisemitic attitudes, shedding light on a complex societal issue.... show more
Abstract
Two cross-sectional studies were carried out in order to identify predictors of antisemitism, measured using the Generalised Antisemitism or GeAs scale. In the first, which used a self-selecting sample of UK-resident adults (n=809), age, gender, ethnicity, and educational level as well as a wide range of ideological predictors were analysed as bivariate predictors of antisemitism. In the second, which used a representative sample of UK-resident adults (n=1853), the same demographic predictors plus the non-demographic predictors found to have the strongest bivariate relationships with Generalised Antisemitism in the previous study were used to construct a linear model with multiple predictors. Ethnicity, support for totalitarian government, belief in malevolent global conspiracies, and anti-hierarchical aggression were identified as the strongest predictors of Generalised Antisemitism. However, support for totalitarian government was only found to predict 'old' antisemitic attitudes (measured using the Judeophobic Antisemitism or JpAs subscale) and not 'new' antisemitic attitudes (measured using the Antizionist Antisemitism or AzAs subscale), whereas ethnicity, anti-hierarchical aggression, and belief in malevolent global conspiracies were found to predict both 'old' and 'new' antisemitic attitudes. This finding adds nuance to ongoing debates about whether antisemitism is more prevalent on the political right or left, by suggesting that (at least in the UK) it is instead associated with a conspiracist view of the world, a desire to overturn the social order, and a preference for authoritarian forms of government—all of which may exist on the right, the left, and elsewhere.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Apr 10, 2023
Authors
Daniel Allington, David Hirsh, Louise Katz
Tags
antisemitism
predictors
conspiracy beliefs
authoritarianism
ideological analysis
social order
UK society
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