Cheater detection in politics: Evolution and citizens' capacity to hold political leaders accountable
The average citizen is often unable to distinguish and choose between political leaders according to their ideological profiles. Research using evolutionary theory shows that citizens instead turn to perceptions of procedural fairness concerning whether leaders follow basic decision-making rules suc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Leadership quarterly 2020-04, Vol.31 (2), p.101268, Article 101268 |
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description | The average citizen is often unable to distinguish and choose between political leaders according to their ideological profiles. Research using evolutionary theory shows that citizens instead turn to perceptions of procedural fairness concerning whether leaders follow basic decision-making rules such as passing policies without personal interest and displaying responsiveness to citizens' opinions. Some argue that this helps citizens “weed out” questionable leaders; others question citizens' ability to distinguish those following the rules from those who do not. To address this question, I build on psychological research showing that the mind possesses a natural ability, a cheater-detection system, enabling the detection of self-interested others who violate social rules. Introducing an experimental protocol from psychology embedded in cross-national surveys, I show that this system also operates when citizens evaluate political leaders, facilitating identification of leaders who violate basic decision-making rules. The findings advance our understanding of citizens' democratic competences and followers' cognitive abilities generally. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.leaqua.2018.09.006 |
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subjects | Cheating Decision making Democratic accountability Evolutionary psychology Ideology Leadership Political leadership Politics Procedural justice The Wason selection task |
title | Cheater detection in politics: Evolution and citizens' capacity to hold political leaders accountable |
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