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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Kent |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Sep 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Aug 31, 2026 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 950651 |
To understand how modern democracies function, we must understand how mass opinion on public policy is formed, develops, and changes over time (i.e., its causes), and how it affects the social structure (i.e., its consequences).
Research on public policy in economics, political science and sociology has revealed a puzzling pattern peoples political attitudes often do not reflect objective reality or rational self-interest.
Psychology has a long tradition of examining the social pressures, cognitive biases, and competing motivations that prevent peoples attitudes from aligning with objectivity and rationality.
PSYPOL will extend these insights to the political domain, by examining the social, cognitive, and motivational bases of policy preferences (Objectives 1, 2 & 3).
It will also examine the consequences of these preferences for individuals political behavior (Objective 4) and for the social structure (Objective 5).
The project will focus on three areas of public policy that share common conceptual roots and empirical gaps, as well as being highly salient in contemporary politics: inequality, immigration and international relations.
PSYPOL will take a novel causal-developmental approach by testing processes of psychological change in massive samples of adolescents and adults, concurrently.
Two largescale data collection initiatives VOICE (adults) and SNAP (adolescents) will enable five state-of-the art methods, each offering unique and complementary insights.
These are: (1) longitudinal and (2) multilevel modeling of panel data (3) social-cognitive experiments (4) experience sampling and (5) network analysis.
Thus, PSYPOL will apply theory and methods from social, developmental, cognitive and political psychology to answer empirical questions arising across the social sciences.
This will generate an integrative framework for studying public attitudes towards policies that determine how symbolic and material resources are distributed in democratic societies.
University of Kent
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