Morally Convicted Political Attitudes and the Importance of Democratic Norms in Maintaining a Strong Democracy

Abstract

Morally convicted political attitudes, operationalized as a measure of egalitarianism and moral traditionalism, affect how important people consider democratic norms to be in maintaining a strong democracy in the United States. Stronger agreement with egalitarianism and more disagreement with moral traditionalism are both associated with an increase in placing more importance on democratic norms

    Similar works