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Jim Sidanius
John Lindsley Professor of Psychology in memory of William James and of African and African American Studies
1430 William James Hall, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge Mass. 02138
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Selected Publications
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1988
Sidanius J
.
Political sophistication and political deviance: A structural equation examination of context theory
. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 1988;55 :37-51.
1987
Nilsson I, Ekehammar B, Sidaniius J
.
Education and ideology: Basic aspects of education related to adolescents` sociopolitical attitudes
. Political Psychology. 1987;8 :395-411.
Sidanius J
.
Social attitudes and political party preferences among Swedish youth
. Scandinavian Political Studies. 1987;10 :111-124.
1985
Sidanius J
.
Cognitive functioning and socio-political ideology revisited
. Political Psychology. 1985;6 :637-661.
Nilsson E, Sidanius J, Sidanius J
.
Education and sociopolitical attitudes
. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research. 1985;29 :1-15.
1984
Sidanius J
.
Political interest, political information search and ideological homogeneity as a function of socio-political ideology: a tale of three theories
. Human Relations. 1984;37 :811-828.
1983
Sidanius J, Ekehammar B
.
Sex, political party preference and higher-order dimensions of socio-political ideology
. Journal of Psychology. 1983;115 :233-239.
1982
Ekehammar B, Sidanius J
.
Sex differences in socio-political ideology: a replication and extension
. British Journal of Social Psychology. 1982;21 :249-257.
1980
Sidanius J, Ekehammar B
.
Sex-related differences in socio-political ideology
. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology. 1980;21 :17-26.
1979
Sidanius J, Ekehammar B
.
Political Socialization: A multivariate analysis of Swedish political attitude and preference data
. European Journal of Social Psychology. 1979;9 :265-279.
1976
Sidanius J, Ekehammar B
.
Cognitive functioning and socio-politico ideology: A multidimensional and individualized analysis
. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology. 1976;17 :205-216.
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Recent Publications
Social dominance theory: explorations in the psychology of oppression.
Is Group Membership Necessary for Understanding Generalized Prejudice? A Re-evaluation of Why Prejudices Are Interrelated.
Muslims’ emotions toward Americans predict support for Hezbollah and Al Qaeda for threat-specific reasons.
Political orientation and dominance: Are people on the political right more dominant?
The nature of social dominance orientation: Theorizing and measuring preferences for intergroup inequality.
Support for asymmetric violence among Arab populations: the clash of cultures, social identity, or Counter-Dominance?
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