Property | Value |
?:about
|
|
?:abstract
|
-
When forming opinions, mass publics may implicitly or explicitly value some peoples well-being more than others. Here we examine how two forms of this phenomenon - ethnocentric valuation and moral exclusion - affect attitudes toward international trade. We hypothesize that attitudes toward competition and believing that trade is a competition moderate the extent of ethnocentric valuation and moral exclusion; although all citizens value their co-nationals livelihoods systematically more than those of people in trading partner countries, greater ethnocentric valuation and moral exclusion occur when trade is seen as a competition and when individuals hold more positive attitudes toward competition. Using two survey experiments conducted on representative samples of both Americans and Canadians, we examine how differential valuation of in-country and out-country job gains and losses influences trade policy preferences. We test a series of hypotheses using multiple variables tied to competitive attitudes across two countries that differ in their attitudes toward competition.
(xsd:string)
|
?:author
|
|
?:contributor
|
|
?:hasFulltext
|
|
is
?:hasPart
of
|
|
?:inLanguage
|
-
Englisch (EN)
(xsd:string)
|
?:libraryLocation
|
|
?:linksLabel
|
|
?:name
|
-
How Much is One American Worth? : How Competition Affects Trade Preferences
(xsd:string)
|
?:provider
|
|
?:publicationType
|
-
Buch
(de)
-
Elektronische Ressource
(xsd:string)
-
books
(en)
|
?:sourceInfo
|
-
GESIS-BIB
(xsd:string)
-
In: American Political Science Review, vol. 114(2020) no. 4 ; p. 1179-1194. ISSN 0003-0554
(xsd:string)
|
rdf:type
|
|
?:url
|
|