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27 May 2019 New evidence on the link between genes, psychological traits, and political engagement
Aaron C. Weinschenk, Christopher T. Dawes, Christian Kandler, Edward Bell, Rainer Riemann
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Abstract

We investigate the link between genes, psychological traits, and political engagement using a new data set containing information on a large sample of young German twins. The TwinLife Study enables us to examine the predominant model of personality, the Big Five framework, as well as traits that fall outside the Big Five, such as cognitive ability, providing a more comprehensive understanding of the underpinnings of political engagement. Our results support previous work showing genetic overlap between some psychological traits and political engagement. More specifically, we find that cognitive ability and openness to experience are correlated with political engagement and that common genes can explain most of the relationship between these psychological traits and political engagement. Relationships between genes, psychological traits, and political engagement exist even at a fairly young age, which is an important finding given that previous work has relied heavily on older samples to study the link between genes, psychological traits, and political engagement.

Aaron C. Weinschenk, Christopher T. Dawes, Christian Kandler, Edward Bell, and Rainer Riemann "New evidence on the link between genes, psychological traits, and political engagement," Politics and the Life Sciences 38(1), 1-13, (27 May 2019). https://doi.org/10.1017/pls.2019.3
Published: 27 May 2019
JOURNAL ARTICLE
13 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
cognitive ability
heritability
personality
Political engagement
twins
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