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10 April 2024 Authoritarianism, perceptions of security threats, and the COVID-19 pandemic: A new perspective
Daniel Stevens, Susan Banducci, Laszlo Horvath
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Abstract

This article offers a new perspective on when and why individual-level authoritarian perceptions of security threats change. We reexamine claims that authoritarian members of the public responded to the COVID-19 pandemic in a counterintuitive fashion. The response was counterintuitive in that, rather than a desire for a stronger government with the ability to impose measures to address the pandemic and its consequences, authoritarian individuals rejected a stronger government response and embraced individual autonomy. The article draws on perceptions of security threats—issues that directly or indirectly harm personal or collective safety and welfare—from surveys in two different contexts in England: 2012, when perceptions of the threat from infectious disease was low relative to most other security threats, and 2020, when perceptions of the personal and collective threat of COVID-19 superseded all other security threats. We argue that the authoritarian response was not counterintuitive once we account for the type of threat it represented.

Daniel Stevens, Susan Banducci, and Laszlo Horvath "Authoritarianism, perceptions of security threats, and the COVID-19 pandemic: A new perspective," Politics and the Life Sciences 43(1), 60-82, (10 April 2024). https://doi.org/10.1017/pls.2023.12
Published: 10 April 2024
JOURNAL ARTICLE
23 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
authoritarianism
Covid-19
health pandemic
security threats
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