The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs

Prior survey research has mostly centered on the psychological dispositions and political leanings associated with conspiracy beliefs rather than underlying and potentially consequential status dynamics. Drawing on prior scholarship and recent national survey data, I analyze the social patterning of...

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Main Author: Saverio Roscigno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2024-04-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241237654
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author Saverio Roscigno
author_facet Saverio Roscigno
author_sort Saverio Roscigno
collection DOAJ
description Prior survey research has mostly centered on the psychological dispositions and political leanings associated with conspiracy beliefs rather than underlying and potentially consequential status dynamics. Drawing on prior scholarship and recent national survey data, I analyze the social patterning of conspiracy beliefs and their variations by several status attributes. Notably, and rather than the typical assumption that such beliefs are mostly held by those of lower education, my findings point clearly to a bimodal (U-shaped) distribution by socioeconomic status. Specifically, and unique to my results, there exists a cluster of graduate-degree-holding white men who display a penchant for conspiracy beliefs. Further analyses highlight important variation between specific beliefs, with distinctly taboo beliefs being exceptionally popular among those in this highly educated group—a pattern corroborated with additional data sources. I conclude by discussing potential mechanisms and avenues that future sociological work on conspiracy beliefs might consider.
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spelling doaj.art-c462170a3f404d9c892810682c52979a2024-04-05T09:03:25ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312024-04-011010.1177/23780231241237654The Status Foundations of Conspiracy BeliefsSaverio Roscigno0University of California, Irvine, CA, USAPrior survey research has mostly centered on the psychological dispositions and political leanings associated with conspiracy beliefs rather than underlying and potentially consequential status dynamics. Drawing on prior scholarship and recent national survey data, I analyze the social patterning of conspiracy beliefs and their variations by several status attributes. Notably, and rather than the typical assumption that such beliefs are mostly held by those of lower education, my findings point clearly to a bimodal (U-shaped) distribution by socioeconomic status. Specifically, and unique to my results, there exists a cluster of graduate-degree-holding white men who display a penchant for conspiracy beliefs. Further analyses highlight important variation between specific beliefs, with distinctly taboo beliefs being exceptionally popular among those in this highly educated group—a pattern corroborated with additional data sources. I conclude by discussing potential mechanisms and avenues that future sociological work on conspiracy beliefs might consider.https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241237654
spellingShingle Saverio Roscigno
The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
Socius
title The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
title_full The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
title_fullStr The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
title_full_unstemmed The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
title_short The Status Foundations of Conspiracy Beliefs
title_sort status foundations of conspiracy beliefs
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231241237654
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