Facilitators of intergenerational similarity in social and political attitudes: the role of discussion, sophistication, attitudinal homogeneity, and gender

Cecil Meeusen, Joris Boonen*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

While parents remain key socializing agents for political attitudes of adolescents, we observe that parent-child similarity in these attitudes is less substantial than initially theorized and seems to vary across studies and type of attitude. We hypothesize that social learning mechanisms explain differences in the strength of parent-child similarity. To assess this proposition, we compare the moderating power of political discussion, political sophistication, parental homogeneity, and gender using data from the Belgian Parent-Child Socialization Study 2013 (N = 1943 families). Our results demonstrate that parents and children resemble in their political and social attitudes and that this similarity is stronger for concrete and socially salient attitudes and reinforced by frequency in political discussion. Results also indicate that social learning practices, or at least the ones considered in this study, are not necessary conditions (anymore) for parent-child correspondence. Frequency of cue-giving in the form of direct communication is important to internalize parental attitudes but political sophistication and consistency in cue-giving less so. Parents and children correspond even in the absence of optimal social learning conditions which suggests that informal learning and observation of parental behavior are crucial to consider as well.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)277-297
Number of pages21
JournalActa Politica
Volume57
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Parent-child similarity
  • Political attitudes
  • Political discussion
  • Political sophistication
  • Parental homogeneity
  • Social learning
  • PARENT-CHILD SIMILARITY
  • PARTY PREFERENCE
  • TRANSMISSION
  • FAMILY
  • SOCIALIZATION
  • ADOLESCENCE
  • PREJUDICE
  • VALUES
  • STABILITY
  • ADULTHOOD

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