4.4 Article

Rural Identity as a Contributing Factor to Anti-Intellectualism in the US

Journal

POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 1509-1532

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11109-022-09770-w

Keywords

Anti-intellectualism; Social identity; Urban-rural; Rural identity

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Anti-intellectualism has a significant political presence, especially in recent years, and understanding the factors that contribute to it is important. This study finds that rural social identification, rather than rural residency alone, significantly predicts greater anti-intellectualism. These findings have implications for understanding public opinion and political behavior.
Anti-intellectualism-a distrust of intellectuals and experts-has had a significant political presence in the U.S. and globally, especially in recent years. Anti-intellectualism drives support for phenomena such as populism, a rejection of scientific consensus, and health and science misinformation endorsement. Therefore, discovering what drives someone to be more anti-intellectual is highly important in understanding contemporary public opinion and political behavior. Here, I argue that a significant and overlooked factor contributing to anti-intellectualism is rural social identification-a psychological attachment to being from a rural area or small town-because rural identity in particular views experts and intellectuals as an out-group. Using 2019 ANES pilot data (N = 3000), original survey data (N = 811) and a separate original survey experiment, I find that rural social identification significantly predicts greater anti-intellectualism. Conversely, anti-intellectualism is not significantly associated with rural residency alone, as theoretically speaking, simply living in a rural area does not capture the affective dimension of rural psychological attachment. These findings have implications for health and science attitudes, populist support, and other relevant political matters. They also have implications for what it means to hold a rural identity beyond anti-urban sentiment, and for understanding the urban-rural divide.

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