On a slippery slope to intolerance: Individual difference in slippery slope beliefs predict outgroup negativity

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Adelman, LeviISNI 0000000492831505
Verkuyten, MaykelORCID 0000-0003-0137-1527ISNI 0000000114807698
Cardenas, D.ISNI 0000000518009852
Yogeeswaran, Kumar

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Slippery slope beliefs capture the idea that a non-problematic action will lead to unpreventable and harmful outcomes. While this idea has been examined in legal and philosophical literatures, there has been no psychological research into the individual propensity to hold slippery slope beliefs. Across five studies and six samples (combined N = 5,974), we developed and tested an individual difference measure of slippery slope beliefs, finding that it predicted intolerance of outgroup freedoms above and beyond key demographic and psychological predictors (Studies 1–2 and 5). We also found that slippery slope beliefs predict intolerance of debated behaviors in two countries (Study 3), and that it predicted agreement with real-world slippery slope examples across the political spectrum (Studies 4–5).

Keywords

Individual difference, Outgroup, Slippery Slope, Tolerance, Social Psychology, General Psychology

Citation

Adelman, L, Verkuyten, M, Cárdenas, D & Yogeeswaran, K 2021, 'On a slippery slope to intolerance : Individual difference in slippery slope beliefs predict outgroup negativity', Journal of Research in Personality, vol. 94, 104141, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2021.104141