Login / Signup

Authoritarianism, perceptions of security threats, and the COVID-19 pandemic: A new perspective.

Daniel StevensSusan BanducciLaszlo Horvath
Published in: Politics and the life sciences : the journal of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences (2023)
This article offers a new perspective on when and why individual-level authoritarian perceptions of security threats change. We reexamine claims that authoritarian members of the public responded to the COVID-19 pandemic in a counterintuitive fashion. The response was counterintuitive in that, rather than a desire for a stronger government with the ability to impose measures to address the pandemic and its consequences, authoritarian individuals rejected a stronger government response and embraced individual autonomy. The article draws on perceptions of security threats-issues that directly or indirectly harm personal or collective safety and welfare-from surveys in two different contexts in England: 2012, when perceptions of the threat from infectious disease was low relative to most other security threats, and 2020, when perceptions of the personal and collective threat of COVID-19 superseded all other security threats. We argue that the authoritarian response was not counterintuitive once we account for the type of threat it represented.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • global health
  • primary care
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • infectious diseases
  • public health
  • emergency department
  • cross sectional
  • health insurance