Abstract

What are the socio-political consequences of infectious diseases? Humans have evolved to avoid disease and infection, resulting in a set of psychological mechanisms that promote disease-avoidance, referred to as the behavioral immune system (BIS). One manifestation of the BIS is the cautious avoidance of unfamiliar, foreign, or potentially contaminating stimuli. Specifically, when disease infection risk is salient or prevalent, authoritarian attitudes can emerge that seek to avoid and reject foreign outgroups while favoring homogenous, familiar ingroups. In the largest study conducted on the topic to date (N > 240,000), elevated regional levels of infectious pathogens were related to more authoritarian attitudes on three geographical levels: across U.S. metropolitan regions, U.S. states, and cross-culturally across 47 countries. The link between pathogen prevalence and authoritarian psychological dispositions predicted conservative voting behavior in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election and more authoritarian governance and state laws, in which one group of people imposes asymmetrical laws on others in a hierarchical structure. Furthermore, cross-cultural analysis illustrated that the relationship between infectious diseases and authoritarianism was pronounced for infectious diseases that can be acquired from other humans (nonzoonotic), and does not generalize to other infectious diseases that can only be acquired from non-human species (zoonotic diseases). At a time of heightened awareness of infectious diseases, the current findings are important reminders that public health and ecology can have ramifications for socio-political attitudes by shaping how citizens vote and are governed.

Highlights

  • Does the prevalence of infectious diseases shape a region’s socio-political outcomes? The Parasite Stress Theory of Sociality hypothesizes that when infections are high, human beings will avoid dissimilar others and will show preferences for obedience and conformity

  • Cross-cultural analysis illustrated that the relationship between infectious diseases and authoritarianism was pronounced for infectious diseases that can be acquired from other humans, and does not generalize to other infectious diseases that can only be acquired from nonhuman species

  • The findings reveal a robust relationship between regional infectious disease rates and psycho-political preferences for conformity and hierarchical power structures

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Summary

Introduction

Does the prevalence of infectious diseases shape a region’s socio-political outcomes? The Parasite Stress Theory of Sociality hypothesizes that when infections are high, human beings will avoid dissimilar others and will show preferences for obedience and conformity. In the largest study to date, the present study examined over 240,000 participants in 47 countries to investigate. Can a need to avoid infections shape human beings’ political cognition and preferences of obedience and conformity? Can a need to avoid infections shape human beings’ political cognition and preferences of obedience and conformity? If so, it is essential to clarify the strength of this relationship, whether it recurs in multiple geographical locations and levels, as well as whether it is specific to certain kinds of diseases but not others

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