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Journal ArticleDOI

Economic Interests and Public Support for American Global Activism

Benjamin O. Fordham
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
- Vol. 62, Iss: 01, pp 163-182
TLDR
The authors evaluated the effect of economic interests on public support for American global activism and found that those who were relatively well-positioned to benefit economically from the American-backed postwar international order, mainly those with better access to human and financial capital, or who hailed from relatively export-oriented parts of the country, should be more likely to support it.
Abstract
This research note evaluates the effect of economic interests on public support for American global activism. Those who were relatively well-positioned to benefit economically from the American-backed postwar international order, mainly those with better access to human and financial capital, or who hailed from relatively export-oriented parts of the country, should be more likely to support it. An analysis of American National Election Study data on support for isolationism between 1956 and 2000 supports this line of argument. Individual self-interest is probably the most important pathway through which the international economy has influenced public opinion. However, the aggregate effects of exports and imports on respondents' home states have also made a difference. The effects of these economic interests are substantively large and fairly consistent over time.A previous version of this work was presented to the 2006 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. I would like to thank Michael A. Bailey, Larry Bartels, Matthew Baum, Adam Berinsky, and Kenneth Schultz for their comments. Any remaining errors and omissions are solely the responsibility of the author.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Support for Free Trade: Self-Interest, Sociotropic Politics, and Out-Group Anxiety

TL;DR: The authors found strong evidence that trade attitudes are guided less by material self-interest than by perceptions of how the U.S. economy as a whole is affected by trade, and that education's effects are less representative of skill than of individuals' anxieties about involvement with outgroups in their own country and beyond.
Journal ArticleDOI

Who supports global economic engagement? The sources of preferences in American foreign economic policy

TL;DR: The authors explored different theoretical predictions about preferences for foreign economic policy using votes in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1979-2004, and found that aid preferences are as affected by domestic political economy factors as are trade preferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Taking foreign policy personally : personal values and foreign policy attitudes

TL;DR: The authors show that people take foreign policy personally: the same basic values that people use to guide choices in their daily lives also travel to the domain of foreign affairs, and that conservation values are most strongly linked to "militant internationalism", a general hawkishness in international relations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cosmopolitan-parochial divide: changing patterns of party and electoral competition in the Netherlands and beyond

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that party and electoral politics in the Netherlands are increasingly characterized by both an economic left-right as well as a cosmopolitan-parochial divide, which relates to issues of state intervention into the economy, the second refers to stances on European integration, migration and national control in international affairs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trade Policy, Economic Interests, and Party Politics in a Developing Country: The Political Economy of CAFTA‐DR

TL;DR: The authors analyzed how economic and political variables influenced Costa Rican voters in a referendum on CAFTA-DR, an international trade agreement, and found little support for Stolper-Samuelson models of economic preferences, but more support for specific factor models.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Commerce and coalitions : how trade affects domestic political alignments

Ronald Rogowski
- 31 Dec 1990 - 
TL;DR: In this article, Rogowski extended some basic findings of economic theories of international trade to the ancient world and the sixteenth century, and found a surprising degree of confirmation and some intriguing exceptions.
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