2017
DOI: 10.5964/jspp.v5i2.748
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Does money change political views? – An investigation of money priming and the preference for right-wing politics

Abstract: In a multistudy approach across seven studies we explored whether, as suggested by previous research, money primes affect people's political orientation. Across the studies we used different dependent variables and samples, and we combined the results in a small-scale meta-analysis to test two competing hypotheses. Independent of the measures and experimental setting, our findings did not indicate that money primes lead to stronger right-wing orientations (main-effect hypothesis). However, we obtained a margin… Show more

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“…3 For an example of a political science article employing an internal meta-analysis, see Clifford, Sheagley, and Piston's (2021) article in the American Political Science Review . See also Schuler, Ivanov, and Wänke (2017) and Urbanska, Perhson, and Turner (2019) .…”
Section: Methodology: An Internal Meta-analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 For an example of a political science article employing an internal meta-analysis, see Clifford, Sheagley, and Piston's (2021) article in the American Political Science Review . See also Schuler, Ivanov, and Wänke (2017) and Urbanska, Perhson, and Turner (2019) .…”
Section: Methodology: An Internal Meta-analysismentioning
confidence: 99%