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| Ideological Constraint Analysis× | Political Ideology Scale× | |
|---|---|---|
| Field | Political Psychology | Political Psychology |
| Family≠ | Latent structure | Process / pipeline |
| Year of origin≠ | 1964 | 1990 |
| Originator≠ | Philip E. Converse | Hans-Dieter Klingemann & Norberto Bobbio |
| Type≠ | Belief-system structure analysis | Self-report |
| Seminal source≠ | Converse, P. E. (1964). The nature of belief systems in mass publics. In D. E. Apter (Ed.), Ideology and Discontent (pp. 206-261). New York: Free Press. ISBN: 9780029006702 | Fuchs, D., & Klingemann, H. D. (1990). The left-right schema. In M. Kent Jennings & Jan W. Van Deth (Eds.), Continuities in political action. Berlin: De Gruyter. link ↗ |
| Aliases | Belief System Constraint, Attitude Constraint Analysis, Issue Consistency Analysis | Left-Right Scale, Ideology Continuum, Political Spectrum Scale |
| Related≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Summary≠ | Ideological constraint analysis measures the degree to which an individual's or a public's political attitudes hang together in a coherent, predictable structure, the extent to which knowing a person's position on one issue lets you predict their positions on others. Introduced by Converse (1964) as the defining feature of a belief system, it is assessed through inter-item correlations, factor/latent-dimension models, and constraint indices. | The Political Ideology Scale measures individual self-placement on a left-right political spectrum, capturing fundamental preferences for government role, economic organization, and social values. The single-item self-placement measure (most common) asks respondents to rate themselves on a 0-10 or 0-100 continuum; multi-item versions assess distinct ideological dimensions (economic policy, social policy, nationalism). The left-right axis remains the dominant organizing principle of political competition globally, predicting party choice, policy preferences, and electoral behavior despite critiques that it oversimplifies multidimensional political space. |
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