Pandemic threat and group cohesion:

national identification in the wake of COVID-19 is associated with authoritarianism

right wing authoritarianism
COVID-19
Political Ideology
Polarization
The Journal of Social Psychology (2022)
Authors
Affiliation

Paul J. Maher

University of Limerick

Jenny Roth

University of Limerick

Siobhán M. Griffin

University of Limerick

Aoife Marie Foran

University of Limerick

Sarah Jay

University of Limerick

Cillian McHugh

University of Limerick

Megan Ryan

University of Limerick

Daragh Bradshaw

University of Limerick

Michael Quayle

University of Limerick

Orla T. Muldoon

University of Limerick

Published

February 9, 2022

Abstract

Authoritarianism emerges in times of societal threat, in part driven by desires for group-based security. As such, we propose that the threat caused by the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with increased authoritarian tendencies and that this can be partially explained by increased national identification. We tested this hypothesis by collecting cross-sectional data from three different countries in April 2020. In Study 1, data from Ireland (N = 1276) showed that pandemic threat predicted increased national identification, which in turn predicted authoritarianism. In Study 2, we replicated this indirect effect in a representative UK sample (N = 506). In Study 3, we used an alternative measure of authoritarianism and conceptually replicated this effect among USA citizens (N = 429). In this US sample, the association between threat and authoritarian tendencies was stronger among progressives compared to conservatives. Findings are discussed and linked to group-based models of authoritarianism.

Bibliography
Maher, P. J., Roth, J., Griffin, S., Foran, A. M., Jay, S., McHugh, C., Ryan, M., Bradshaw, D., Quayle, M., & Muldoon, O. T. (2022). Pandemic threat and group cohesion: National identification in the wake of COVID-19 is associated with authoritarianism. The Journal of Social Psychology, 0(0), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.1080/00224545.2021.2024122