1950 sociology book
The Authoritarian Personality
is a 1950
sociology
book by
Theodor W. Adorno
,
Else Frenkel-Brunswik
,
Daniel Levinson
, and
Nevitt Sanford
, researchers working at the
University of California, Berkeley
, during and shortly after
World War II
.
The Authoritarian Personality
"invented a set of criteria by which to define personality traits, ranked these traits and their intensity in any given person on what it called the '
F scale
' (F for
fascist
)."
[1]
The personality type Adorno et al. identified can be defined by nine traits that were believed to cluster together as the result of childhood experiences. These traits include conventionalism, authoritarian submission, authoritarian aggression, anti-intraception,
superstition
and
stereotypy
, power and "toughness", destructiveness and cynicism, projectivity, and exaggerated concerns over sex.
[2]
[
need quotation to verify
]
[3]
Though criticized at the time for bias and methodology,
[4]
[5]
the book was highly influential in American social sciences, particularly in the first decade after its publication: "No volume published since the war in the field of social psychology has had a greater impact on the direction of the actual empirical work being carried on in the universities today."
[6]
Institutional context
[
edit
]
Theodor Adorno and a team of researchers?
Else Frenkel-Brunswik
,
Daniel Levinson
, and
Nevitt Sanford
?working at
University of California, Berkeley
produced
The Authoritarian Personality
as part of the "Studies in Prejudice" series sponsored by the
American Jewish Committee
's Department of Scientific Research.
[7]
[8]
From 1936 to 1945, American social scientists conducted over 400 surveys on antisemitism as part of a larger goal of fortifying democracy in the United States against fascism.
[9]
: 711
In 1943, the Jewish Labor Committee (JLC) initiated a comprehensive study of the prevalence of antisemitism among American workers.
[9]
: 711?2
Max Horkheimer
, from the Institute of Social Research in Frankfurt, and Adorno, conducted the research for these studies.
[9]
Starting in 1944, the exiled Institute was hired by the JLC to conduct a study led by
Leo Lowenthal
and others, with assistance from Adorno. Their 1500-page report based on empirical data on "Antisemitism among American Labor", found that American workers held strong antisemitic tendencies and were drawn to fascism. This labor study, which was never published, has been identified by some scholars as the "conduit" between Adorno and Horkheimer's
Dialectic of Enlightenment
[10]
and
The Authoritarian Personality
.
[11]
[9]
: 714
The research was conducted during and after World War II and the
Holocaust
?the attempted genocide of European
Jews
by
Adolf Hitler
's
National Socialist
regime when significant concerns about the origins of fascism and authoritarianism had been raised.
[12]
Adorno had been a member of the "
Frankfurt School
", a group of philosophers and Marxist theorists who fled Germany when Hitler shut down their
Institute for Social Research
. Adorno et al. were thus motivated by a desire
[
citation needed
]
to identify and measure factors that were believed to contribute to antisemitic and fascist traits.
Sources and influences
[
edit
]
The Authoritarian Personality
was based in part on earlier Frankfurt School analyses undertaken in Germany, but with a few key changes. First, their Marxist and radical roots were downplayed. For example, the earlier "authoritarian personality/revolutionary personality" axis was changed to an "authoritarian personality/democratic personality" axis in America. Thus, values and behaviors earlier associated with revolutionary Marxism were now associated with support for
democracy
.
[13]
Second, the book abandoned and/or modified traditional Marxist sociological and economic explanations for human behavior in favor of psychological explanations, earning scorn from more orthodox Marxists.
[14]
Generally, Adorno et al. took an
antipositivist
position;
[15]
[16]
More generally, the Frankfurt School has been critical of
reductionism
and the
third-person perspective
in the social sciences. Instead, it recognizes that
social science research is inevitably value-laden, which calls for a model of
scientist who is a self-reflective interpreter, rather than a technical
problem-solver. Furthermore, it assigns a practical purpose in social science.
Following a Marxist tradition, it requires that theories in social
science should not only describe and explain the social world, but also should
serve a human emancipation agenda in all circumstances of oppression and
dominance. This is a different approach in
philosophy of science
than
falsification
, more popular in the natural sciences.
[17]
Content
[
edit
]
A central idea of
The Authoritarian Personality
is that authoritarianism is the result of a
Freudian
developmental model. Excessively harsh and punitive parenting was posited to cause children to feel immense anger towards their parents; yet fear of parental disapproval or punishment caused people to not directly confront their parents, but rather to identify with and idolize authority figures.
[2]
[
page needed
]
Moreover, the book suggested that authoritarianism was rooted in suppressed
homosexuality
, which was redirected into outward hostility towards the father, which was, in turn, suppressed for fear of being infantilized and castrated by the father.
[2]
: 192
[18]
This hypothesis was consistent with prevailing psychological theories of the time, and Frenkel-Brunswik reported some preliminary support, but empirical data have generally not confirmed this prediction.
[19]
[
page needed
]
[
need quotation to verify
]
Authoritarianism was measured by the
F-scale
. The "F" was short for "pre-fascist personality." Another major hypothesis of the book is that the authoritarian syndrome is predisposed to
right-wing
ideology and therefore receptive to
fascist
governments.
[2]
[
page needed
]
Methodology
[
edit
]
The study employs both quantitative and qualitative components. The first part
of the research resembles a survey type of research with structured
questionnaires. Based on the scores on the questionnaires, a smaller number of
participants was elected for clinical interviews and administration of the
Thematic Apperception Test
. Interviews were coded with the techniques of
content analysis
.
[a]
Sample
[
edit
]
"The majority of the subjects could be characterized as white, non-Jewish,
native-born, middle-class Americans and the authors guessed that their findings
would hold for this population"
[20]
: 48
[Critique point]
: The individuals were sampled from formal organizations. There
are reasons to believe that there are systematic differences between such a
sample and the aforementioned population (see section Overall Criticism).
Response format
[
edit
]
Likert type items
ranging from ?3 to +3 without a middle point.
Psychometric scales
[
edit
]
- Anti-Semitism Scale
- Ethnocentrism Scale
- Political & Economical Conservatism Scale
Anti-Semitism scale
[
edit
]
This is a listing of the content categories featured in the items. These traits
are attributed to
Jewish
people.
[20]
: 48
- Offensive
(conceited, sensual, dirty)
- Threatening
(ruthless, competitive, radical)
- Attitudes
(discriminative action to be taken)
- Seclusive
(clannish, keeping apart from gentiles)
- Intrusive
(desire to intrude where not welcome)
All items were phrased in affirmation of the Anti-Semitic sentiment. Brown (2004, p. 48),
together with many others, criticizes this choice as "unwise".
[20]
: 48
The items were phrased in a superficially moderate language, which nonetheless
conveyed the saliency of Jews to the respondent and a negative sentiment towards
them
[20]
: 49
Ethnocentrism
[
edit
]
Split-half reliability for the scale was .91 (high). The correlation between
Ethnocentrism
and
Anti-Semitism
scales was .80 (relatively high). This
result is "evidence that antagonism to the culturally unlike is a generalized
sentiment"
[20]
: 50
Political and economical conservatism
[
edit
]
Split-half reliability for PEC scale was .73 (moderate). The scale's correlation
with A-S and E was not strong, but in none of the groups was it negative. "[...]
neither ethnocentrism nor Anti-Semitism ever showed a tendency to go with
leftist liberal views."
[20]
: 50
F Scale
[
edit
]
The F scale targets an authoritarian, anti-democratic personality profile that makes a person susceptible to Fascist propaganda. The items were written in accordance to fascist propaganda materials as well as
priory held
TAT protocol data and interviews with ethnocentric participants.
- Conventionalism
: Adherence to conventional values.
- Authoritarian Submission
: Towards
ingroup
authority figures.
- Authoritarian Aggression
: Against people who violate conventional values.
- Anti-Intraception
: Opposition to subjectivity and imagination.
- Superstition and Stereotypy
: Belief in individual fate; thinking in rigid categories.
- Power and Toughness
: Concerned with submission and domination; assertion of strength.
- Destructiveness and Cynicism
: hostility against human nature.
- Projectivity
: Perception of the world as dangerous; tendency to project unconscious impulses.
- Sex
: Overly concerned with modern sexual practices.
Across various participant groups, the average
item-total correlation
was 0.33. Subsequent factor analysis confirmed a one-dimensional structure of these content subsets of items (Eysenck 1954, p 152, ref by Brown, p. 53). The first form of the F-Scale correlated 0.53 with A-S, 0.65 to E and 0.54 to PEC. The scale was revised by dropping items with low item-total correlations and/or low predictive value of A-S and E scores. The revised form correlated by 0.75 to a combined A-S/E scale, and 0.57 to PEC. Ethnocentrism, anti-Semitism and potentiality for fascism were inter-related to each other, as well as to conservatism, although not as prominently.
Correlations with IQ, SES, and education
[
edit
]
Ethnocentrism is negatively correlated with both IQ and years of education. Subsequent analyses by Christie showed that education is the mediating factor in this set of relationships. Intelligence is not as strongly correlated to E
per se
if years of education are partialed out, the partial correlation being as small as -.20. Christie also estimated the expected correlation between "either IQ and F scores or years of education and F scores for a representative cross-sectional sample, range between -.50 and -.60".
[20]
: 74
Clinical and projective data
[
edit
]
Interviews
[
edit
]
The interviewers were instructed to obtain information of the following areas.
There were more specific instructions and points of emphasis within each of
these areas.
- Vocation
- Income
- Religion
- Clinical Data
- Family Background: Sociological Aspects
- Family Figures: Personal Aspects
- Childhood
- Sex
- Social Relationships
- School
- Politics
- Minorities and Race
[Critique Point] Interviewers (but not coders) were aware of the participants
responses and were instructed to study them before interview. This choice was
also "severely criticized"
[20]
: 55
"In considerable degree, [...], the projective data confirm the covariation of
implicit antidemocratic trends with prejudice which was demonstrated by the
questionnaire data".
Construction of personality
[
edit
]
- Self Glorification
vs
Objective Self Appraisal
- Conventional Idealization of Parents
vs
Objective Appraisal
- Family status-concerned
vs
Family status-relaxed
Additional: Coping with Ambivalence about Self and Others, Lack of acceptance
of aggressive feelings towards the parents, Projection of sexual and aggressive
impulses to minorities, and its psychological function. "Repression of impulses
leads to projection which functions as rationalization for an expression.'
[20]
: 62
[Critique Point]: Coding and Interpretation is informed by psychoanalytic
theory.
Cognitive style
[
edit
]
- Rigidity
vs
Flexibility
- Intolerance of Ambiguity
vs
Tolerance of Ambiguity
(see Jaensch's Typology)
[Critique Point] Due to the coders having access to the protocols, the
dependency between prejudice and rigidity may be biased.
[20]
: 65
Overall criticism
[
edit
]
Sampling
[
edit
]
Participants were recruited through formal organizations. Christie reports
though that people belonging to at least one organization differ significantly
from people that do not belong to organizations at all. Thus the sample taken
was not representative of white, non-Jewish, middle-class, Americans. The
correlations between A-S, E and F vary in different samples, subsequent studies
showed. However, a negative correlation was never found between those scales.
[
citation needed
]
[
original research?
]
Acquiescence Response Set
[
edit
]
Couch and Keniston (1960) addressed the problem of the items being all phrased in an affirmative direction towards anti-Semitism.
[21]
In a large number of psychometric instruments, they showed that the tendency to respond affirmatively (Yeasayers) or negatively (Naysayers) is a relevant psychological factor despite the content of specific questionnaires.
[20]
: 68
It is now accepted that a greater proportion of variance can be attributed to
individual response patterns rather than the targeted Anti-Semitic attitude.
This poses a
validity
problem: The scale may not accurately record the
variable it is intended to measure.
Bass found a .20 correlation between F-scale and an item-by-item reversed version.
(expected correlation if the phrasing played no role would be ?1.00)
Christie used more elaborate reversal of items accounting for linguistic and
psychological subtleties preserving the original rationale of the items
preparation.
[20]
: 67
See section on Overall Criticism.
Criticisms of content analyses
[
edit
]
- Interviewer Knowledge of Questionnaire Responses
- Examination of Data in Advance of Coding
- Coding Multiple Variables from the Same Content
- Reporting Inter-rater Reliability for Too General Coding Categories
[20]
: 69?72
Explanation in terms of socio-economic status (SES) rather than repression
[
edit
]
"We can easily imagine plausible reasons for the association of each
authoritarian trait with the cluster that includes low IQ, little education, and
low SES and so the explanation of covariation among the traits is simply their
several particular ties to the same underlying factors. [...][However][...]
Norms are not put together at random or incidentally. When they stabilize into a
particular combination it must be because that is a combination that works for
human personalities" (Brown, p. 75)
[20]
: 75
Left wing authoritarianism
[
edit
]
A number of studies have examined the external
criterion validity of F scale, with various demographic and political groups.
Such groups included: German cosmetic factory workers (Cohn and Carsch, 1954);
English fascists and communists, compared to 'politically neutral' soldiers
(Coulter, 1953). Both studies found high scores (>5) in F-Scale.
However, the Coulter study also found the Communists scored higher in F-Scale than
the politically neutral group. Eysenck (1954, ref. by Brown, p. 80) commented that Coulter's results indicate
that the F-Scale actually measures general authoritarianism, rather than
fascist tendencies in particular. (see
Left-Wing authoritarianism
)
Christie (1956) attributed Coulter's findings to sampling fluctuation, pointing
out the politically neutral group was unusually low in F-Scale, compared to
50 known group means at the time. Rokeach (1960) obtained F-Scale scores from 13
Communist college students in England. Their mean was the lowest of all known
groups.
Brown, (2004, p. 80) states: "... the Berkeley researchers seem to have been correct in their belief that the
F-Scale is a measure of fascism."
[20]
: 80
Authors and conflicts
[
edit
]
Sanford and Levinson were both psychology professors at Berkeley. They did much of the preliminary work on ethnocentrism and statistical measurement. Frenkel-Brunswik examined personality variables and family background with a series of interview studies. Adorno provided a political and sociological perspective to the book. Although Adorno's name heads the alphabetical list of authors, he arrived late to the project and made a relatively small contribution.
[22]
[
need quotation to verify
]
Adorno, in a 1947 letter to Horkheimer, said that his main contribution was the F-scale, which in the end was the "core of the whole thing."
[23]
An agreement among the authors held that each one was to sign the individual chapters to which he or she had contributed, and that all four were to sign the chapter on the F-scale;
[23]
Adorno was credited in 5 of the 23 chapters.
The initially planned title for the book was
The Fascist Character and the Measurement of Fascist Trends
, but as early as 1947 Adorno feared that the assistants at Berkeley would try to sanitize it to a more innocuous title like
Character and Prejudice
. The final title was the result of a compromise.
[23]
Responses
[
edit
]
The Authoritarian Personality
inspired extensive research in
psychology
,
sociology
, and
political science
during the 1950s and early 1960s on the relation between personality traits, behavior, and political beliefs.
The Authoritarian Personality
has often provoked polarized responses: "The Berkeley study of authoritarian personality does not leave many people indifferent".
[24]
The study "has been subjected to considerable criticism"
[25]
since the 1950s, particularly for various methodological flaws, including
sample bias
and poor
psychometric
techniques.
[26]
[
page needed
]
[
need quotation to verify
]
In 1973, Gaensslen et al.
[27]
found that, contrary to predictions by Adorno et al.,
[
need quotation to verify
]
rigidity/dogmatism is not intrinsically maladaptive; e.g., rigidity can be associated with discipline and
productivity
.
[
need quotation to verify
]
In 1980, sociologist J.J. Ray
[28]
argued that the project of
The Authoritarian Personality
was seriously flawed
[
need quotation to verify
]
on several points: for not asking questions regarding
libertarian
politics (which according to Ray are typically more anti-authoritarian than right- or left-wing politics
[
need quotation to verify
]
); for failing to demonstrate that authoritarian/right-wing beliefs are correlated with
psychopathology
; and, most importantly, for failing to demonstrate that authoritarian beliefs are associated with authoritarian behavior. In 1993, over a decade later, the latter point was also criticized by Billings et al.
[29]
[
better source needed
]
The book concludes that right-wing, authoritarian governments produce hostility towards racial, religious, or ethnic minorities. Psychologist
Bob Altemeyer
argued against that conclusion, saying that Fascist Italy was not characterized by antisemitism, and that Jews occupied high positions in Mussolini's government until pressure from Hitler disenfranchised these Jews.
[30]
Rubenstein's research in Israel revealed that Orthodox Jews scored higher on right wing politics and authoritarianism as traits than Reform Jews, and that both groups scored higher than Secular Jews. However, it cannot be said that there is no relationship between traits of Right-Wing Authoritarians and antisemitism. In fact, Adorno's nine traits of the "F scale" are rather general and have been thought to identify fascist as well as anti-Semitic individual attributes. The fact that Rubenstein himself affirms that "the results confirm the validity of the RWA" represents a particularly interesting outcome: Orthodox and Reform Jews in Israel are classified closer to the fascist and anti-Semitic traits, as thought in 1950 by Adorno et al., compared to Secular Jews in Israel.
[31]
Some observers have criticized what they saw as a strongly politicized agenda to
The Authoritarian Personality
. Conservative social critic
Christopher Lasch
[32]
argued that by equating mental health with left-wing politics and associating right-wing politics with an invented "authoritarian" pathology, the book's goal was to eliminate antisemitism by "subjecting the American people to what amounted to collective psychotherapy?by treating them as inmates of an insane asylum".
The Authoritarian Personality
remains widely cited in the social sciences and continues to inspire research interest today.
[33]
Hyman and Sheatsley 1954
"Our major criticisms lead us inevitably to conclude that the authors' theory
has not been proved by the data they cite".
[20]
: 76
Brown 2004
"The most serious defects in the questionnaire work are the inadequate sampling
methods and the operation of response sets. [In spite of that] there is a
substantial residual probability that the chief conclusion of the questionnaire
work is correct: attitudes of Anti-Semitism, ethnocentrism, and authoritarianism
do generally go together. [...] some of the findings of the questionnaire study
were replicated in the projectives study, and while this latter work has its own
deficiencies, some account must be taken for the convergence in the two sets of
data."
[20]
: 77
"Perhaps the least well supported of all the findings in the Berkeley study are
those concerning the genesis of authoritarianism in childhood. [...] However,
Frenkel-Brunswik has directly studied prejudice in childhood and adolescence.
She reports confirmation of most of the original findings."
[20]
: 77
Christie and Cook 1958
Christie and Cook (1958)
[34]
cite 230 titles relating to The Authoritarian
Personality and they conclude that:
"...the overall picture shows consistency of findings in many of the most
intensively studied areas. The E and F scales are found to be significantly
correlated in a wide array of samples and predictions of relationships with
attitudinal measures are almost invariably confirmed"
[20]
: 76
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
Informational notes
- ^
Based on Brown (2004)
[20]
Citations
- ^
Codevilla, Angelo (16 July 2010)
America's Ruling Class
Archived
25 February 2011 at the
Wayback Machine
,
The American Spectator
- ^
a
b
c
d
Adorno, Theodor
;
Frenkel-Brunswik, Else
;
Levinson, Daniel
;
Sanford, Nevitt
(1993) [1950].
The Authoritarian Personality
. Studies in Prejudice Series. Vol. 1.
New York City
:
Harper & Row
and
W. W. Norton & Company
.
ISBN
0-393-31112-0
.
- ^
Adorno and the political
By Espen Hammer p.62
- ^
Mangus A. R. (1954). "Studies in the Scope And Method Of 'The Authoritarian Personality' (Book)".
Rural Sociology
.
19
(2): 198?200.
- ^
Wolfe Alan (2005). "
'The Authoritarian Personality' Revisited".
Chronicle of Higher Education
.
52
(7): B12?B13.
[1]
- ^
Glazer, Nathan. (1954). "New light on The Authoritarian Personality: A survey of recent research and criticism."
Commentary
17 (March), pp. 289?297.
- ^
Horkheimer, Max; Flowerman, Samuel H (1950).
Foreword to Studies in Prejudice in "The Authoritarian Personality"
. Norton Library. pp. v?vi.
- ^
American Jewish Committee
News
, 15 March 1950.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Clavey, Charles H. (October 2023). "
"The Stereotype Takes Care of Everything": Labor Antisemitism and Critical Theory During World War II".
Journal of the History of Ideas
.
84
(4): 711?742.
doi
:
10.1353/jhi.2023.a909536
.
ISSN
0022-5037
.
PMID
38588303
.
- ^
Max Horkheimer
;
Theodor W. Adorno
(1972) [1947].
Dialectic of Enlightenment
. Translated by John Cumming. New York:
Herder and Herder
. p. 304.
ISBN
0-8047-3633-2
.
OCLC
48851495
.
- ^
Ziege, Eva-Maria (2009).
Antisemitismus und Gesellschaftstheorie. Die Frankfurter Schule im amerikanischen Exil
(in German). Frankfurt: Suhrkamp.
- ^
Stephen Dozeman (host), Charles Clavey (guest).
"Theodor Adorno, "The Authoritarian Personality"
(Podcast). New Books Network
. Retrieved
9 November
2023
.
- ^
Jay, Martin (1973). The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research 1923?1950. London: Heinemann.
ISBN
0-435-82476-7
, p. 273
- ^
Jay 1973, 227.
- ^
Adorno stated: "[The TAP questionnaire] was produced in a manner which does not correspond at all to the usual image of positivism in social science…" quoted in Wiggershaus, R. (1994). The Frankfurt School: Its History, Theories, and Political Significance, translated by M. Robertson. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, p. 373.
- ^
"[W]e never regarded the theory simply as a set of hypotheses but as in some sense standing on its own feet, and therefore did not intend to prove or disprove the theory through our findings but only to derive from it concrete questions for investigation, which must then be judged on their own merit and demonstrate certain prevalent socio-psychological structures" Adorno, T. W. (1969). "Scientific Experiences of a European Scholar in America" In
The Intellectual Migration: Europe and America, 1930?1960
, eds. D. Fleming & B. Bailyn. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press., p. 363.
- ^
Bohman, James (2016).
"Critical Theory"
. In Edward N. Zalta (ed.).
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(Fall 2016 ed.). Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
- ^
"The forbidden action which is converted into aggression is generally homosexual in nature. Through fear of castration, obedience to the father is taken to the extreme of an anticipation of castration in conscious emotional approximation to the nature of a small girl, and actual hatred to the father is suppressed." See Adorno 1950 (1991)
- ^
Altemeyer, B. (1988).
Enemies of freedom: Understanding right-wing authoritarianism
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
Brown, Roger (2004). "The Authoritarian Personality and the Organization of Attitudes". In John T. Jost; Jim Sidanius (eds.).
Political Psychology: Key Readings
. Psychology Press. pp. 45?85.
ISBN
978-1-84169-070-4
.
- ^
Couch, A.; Keniston, K. (1960). "Yeasayers and naysayers: agreeing response set as a personality variable".
Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology
.
60
(2): 151?174.
doi
:
10.1037/h0040372
.
ISSN
0096-851X
.
PMID
13812335
.
- ^
Stone, W. F., Lederer, G., and Christie, R. (1993). Introduction: Strength and weakness. In Stone, W. F., Lederer, G., and Christie, R. (Eds.).
Strength and weakness: The authoritarian personality today
. New York: Springer-Verlag.
- ^
a
b
c
Wiggershaus, Rolf (1995)
The Frankfurt School: Its History, Theories, and Political Significance
, p.411
- ^
Brown, R. (1965). Social Psychology. London: Collier-Macmillan, p. 479.
- ^
Don Stewart and Thomas Hoult (1959). "A Social-Psychological Theory of the Authoritarian Personality".
The American Journal of Sociology
Vol. 65, No. 3 (Nov. 1959), pp. 274?279.
- ^
Christie, Richard; Jahoda, Marie, eds. (1954).
Studies in the scope and method of 'The Authoritarian Personality'
. Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press.
- ^
Gaensslen H.; May F.; Woelpert F. (1973). "Relation Between Dogmatism and Anxiety".
Psychological Reports
.
33
(3): 955?58.
doi
:
10.2466/pr0.1973.33.3.955
.
PMID
4767853
.
S2CID
46608128
.
- ^
Ray, J.J. (1980). "Libertarians and the Authoritarian Personality". The Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. IV, No. 1, Winter 1980, pp. 39?43.
- ^
Billings S. W.; Guastello S. J.; Reike M. L. (1993). "A comparative assessment of the construct validity of three authoritarianism measures".
Journal of Research in Personality
.
27
(4): 328?348.
doi
:
10.1006/jrpe.1993.1023
.
- ^
Altemeyer, B. (1981).
Right-Wing Authoritarianism
. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press., p. 28.
- ^
Rubenstein G (1996). "Two peoples in one land: A validation study of Altemeyer's Right-Wing Authoritarianism Scale in the Palestinian and Jewish Societies in Israel".
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
.
27
(2): 216?230.
doi
:
10.1177/0022022196272005
.
S2CID
146603681
.
- ^
Lasch, Christopher (1991). The True and Only Heaven: Progress and Its Critics. New York: W. W. Norton, p. 453.
- ^
"Political conservatism as motivated social cognition", authors John T. Jost, Jack Glaser, Arie W. Kruglanski and Frank J. Sulloway, journal title "Psychological Bulletin", 2003, Vol. 129, No. 3, pp. 339?375
- ^
Christie, Richard; Cook, Peggy (1 April 1958). "A Guide to Published Literature Relating to the Authoritarian Personality Through 1956".
The Journal of Psychology
.
45
(2): 171?199.
doi
:
10.1080/00223980.1958.9916248
.
ISSN
0022-3980
.
Further reading
- Adorno, Theodor
;
Frenkel-Brunswik, Else
;
Levinson, Daniel
;
Sanford, Nevitt
(1993) [1950].
The Authoritarian Personality
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Enemies of Freedom: Understanding Right-Wing Authoritarianism
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The Authoritarian Specter
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ISBN
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Studies in the Scope and Method of 'The Authoritarian Personality'
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ASIN
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- Gerhardt, Christina. "
The Authoritarian Personality: Then and Now
." The Routledge International Handbook of Perpetrator Studies. Eds. Zachary Goldberg and Susanne Knittel. Routledge, 2019. 61?73.
- Jost, John T.; Glaser, Jack; Kruglanski, Arie W.; Sulloway, Frank J. (2003).
"Political conservatism as motivated social cognition"
(PDF)
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