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      Who Deserves Help? Evolutionary Psychology, Social Emotions, and Public Opinion about Welfare

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          Abstract

          Evidence suggests that our foraging ancestors engaged in the small-scale equivalent of social insurance as an essential tool of survival and evolved a sophisticated psychology of social exchange (involving the social emotions of compassion and anger) to regulate mutual assistance. Here, we hypothesize that political support for modern welfare policies are shaped by these evolved mental programs. In particular, the compassionate motivation to share with needy nonfamily could not have evolved without defenses against opportunists inclined to take without contributing. Cognitively, such parasitic strategies can be identified by the intentional avoidance of productive effort. When detected, this pattern should trigger anger and down-regulate support for assistance. We tested predictions derived from these hypotheses in four studies in two cultures, showing that subjects’ perceptions of recipients’ effort to find work drive welfare opinions; that such perceptions (and not related perceptions) regulate compassion and anger (and not related emotions); that the effects of perceptions of recipients’ effort on opinions about welfare are mediated by anger and compassion, independently of political ideology; and that these emotions not only influence the content of welfare opinions but also how easily they are formed.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          9885421
          36853
          Polit Psychol
          Polit Psychol
          Political psychology
          0162-895X
          1467-9221
          14 January 2013
          28 May 2012
          1 June 2012
          01 June 2013
          : 33
          : 3
          : 395-418
          Affiliations
          Aarhus University
          University of California, Santa Barbara
          University of California, Santa Barbara
          University of California, Santa Barbara
          Article
          PMC3551585 PMC3551585 3551585 nihpa434454
          10.1111/j.1467-9221.2012.00883.x
          3551585
          23355755
          4353566b-12db-49ac-97a7-092677e045cf
          © 2012 International Society of Political Psychology
          History
          Funding
          Funded by: Office of the Director : NIH
          Award ID: DP1 OD000516 || OD
          Categories
          Article

          evolutionary psychology,public opinion,social welfare,social emotions,social exchange

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