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Worldviews about change: Their structure and their implications for understanding responses to sustainability, technology, and political change

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posted on 2023-11-20, 05:51 authored by PG Bain, R Bongiorno, K Tinson, A Heanue, Á Gómez, Y Guan, N Lebedeva, Emiko KashimaEmiko Kashima, R González, SX Chen, S Blumen, Y Kashima
People hold different perspectives about how they think the world is changing or should change. We examined five of these “worldviews” about change: Progress, Golden Age, Endless Cycle, Maintenance, and Balance. In Studies 1–4 (total N = 2733) we established reliable measures of each change worldview, and showed how these help explain when people will support or oppose social change in contexts spanning sustainability, technological innovations, and political elections. In mapping out these relationships we identify how the importance of different change worldviews varies across contexts, with Balance most critical for understanding support for sustainability, Progress/Golden Age important for understanding responses to innovations, and Golden Age uniquely important for preferring Trump/Republicans in the 2016 US election. These relationships were independent of prominent individual differences (e.g., values, political orientation for elections) or context-specific factors (e.g., self-reported innovativeness for responses to innovations). Study 5 (N = 2140) examined generalizability in 10 countries/regions spanning five continents, establishing that these worldviews exhibited metric invariance, but with country/region differences in how change worldviews were related to support for sustainability. These findings show that change worldviews can act as a general “lens” people use to help determine whether to support or oppose social change.

Funding

This research was partly supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Project Grants to the first author (DP0984678; DP180100294).

History

Publication Date

2023-12-01

Journal

Asian Journal of Social Psychology

Volume

26

Issue

4

Pagination

504-535

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1367-2223

Rights Statement

© 2023 The Authors. Asian Journal of Social Psychology published by Asian Association of Social Psychology and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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