Author
Abstract
Theories of the behavioral consequences of political support coincide in the prediction that political support will correlate positively with indices of conventional behavior, negatively with indices of unconventional behavior. Survey data drawn from three communities in the Federal Republic of Germany show that an index of support for the structure of political authority is negatively correlated both with an index of actual participation in aggressive political behavior and with an index of participation in conventional electoral/pressure-group politics. Since the political behavior indices are themselves positively correlated, it is useful to construct a typology which differentiates between “pure” types – no participation, participation only in conventional, participation only in aggressive – and “mixed” types – participation in conventional and moderately aggressive, participation in conventional and highly aggressive. When the relationship between political support and the political-action type index is examined, it turns out that two of the types are associated with medium political support, while four of them occur at low support. To achieve more accurate explanation of types of political behavior, a model for prediction of each action type is proposed, taking into account interaction between political support, sense of personal political influence, and belief in the efficacy of past collective political aggression. The test of the model yields positive results, suggesting that it represents a fruitful beginning toward development of a theory of behavioral consequences of political support.
Suggested Citation
Muller, Edward N., 1977.
"Behavioral Correlates of Political Support,"
American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 71(2), pages 454-467, June.
Handle:
RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:71:y:1977:i:02:p:454-467_26
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Cited by:
- Tao, Ran & Su, Fubing & Sun, Xin & Lu, Xi, 2011.
"Political trust as rational belief: Evidence from Chinese village elections,"
Journal of Comparative Economics, Elsevier, vol. 39(1), pages 108-121, March.
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