Abstract

Multidimensional concepts are non-compensatory when higher values on one component cannot offset lower values on another. Thinking of the components of a multidimensional phenomenon as non-compensatory rather than substitutable can have wide-ranging implications, both conceptually and empirically. To demonstrate this point, we focus on populist attitudes that feature prominently in contemporary debates about liberal democracy. Given similar established public opinion constructs, the conceptual value of populist attitudes hinges on its unique specification as an attitudinal syndrome, which is characterized by the concurrent presence of its non-compensatory concept subdimensions. Yet this concept attribute is rarely considered in existing empirical research. We propose operationalization strategies that seek to take the distinct properties of non-compensatory multidimensional concepts seriously. Evidence on five populism scales in 12 countries reveals the presence and consequences of measurement-concept inconsistencies. Importantly, in some cases, using conceptually sound operationalization strategies upsets previous findings on the substantive role of populist attitudes.

Highlights

  • Populism is an essential social science concept, and it is an essentially contested concept (Mudde 2017)

  • What makes populist attitudes valuable as a concept is the claim that populism at the mass level represents more than the sum of its parts

  • In its distinctive position at the intersection of the concept components, populist attitudes are not just another variant of concepts well-known to scholars of public opinion

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Summary

HARALD SCHOEN University of Mannheim

Multidimensional concepts are non-compensatory when higher values on one component cannot offset lower values on another. Thinking of the components of a multidimensional phenomenon as non-compensatory rather than substitutable can have wide-ranging implications, both conceptually and empirically. To demonstrate this point, we focus on populist attitudes that feature prominently in contemporary debates about liberal democracy. Given similar established public opinion constructs, the conceptual value of populist attitudes hinges on its unique specification as an attitudinal syndrome, which is characterized by the concurrent presence of its non-compensatory concept subdimensions. This concept attribute is rarely considered in existing empirical research. In some cases, using conceptually sound operationalization strategies upsets previous findings on the substantive role of populist attitudes

INTRODUCTION
ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CONCEPTS AND CONCEPT COMPONENTS
Continuous Goertz Bollen
AGGREGATION RULES FOR NONCOMPENSATORY CONCEPTS SUCH AS POPULIST ATTITUDES
DATA AND OPERATIONALIZATION
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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