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Article
Where the Rubber Meats the Road: Relationships between Vegetarianism and Socio-political Attitudes and Voting Behavior
Ecology of Food and Nutrition (2019)
  • John B. Nezlek, William & Mary
  • Catherine Forestell, William & Mary
Abstract
Previous research has found that omnivores are more hierarchical and more authoritarian than vegetarians. To examine if such differences extend to political behavior a sample of American undergraduates (N = 1211) described their diets, endorsement of social policies, political orientation, and voting behavior. Consistent with previous research, we found that compared to vegetarians and semi-vegetarians, omnivores favored conservative policies more strongly and liberal polices less strongly, identified more closely with the Republican party and less closely with the Democratic party, were less liberal, approved of Donald Trump’s performance more, and were more likely to have voted for Trump.
Disciplines
Publication Date
July 15, 2019
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/03670244.2019.1641801
Citation Information
John B. Nezlek and Catherine Forestell. "Where the Rubber Meats the Road: Relationships between Vegetarianism and Socio-political Attitudes and Voting Behavior" Ecology of Food and Nutrition Vol. 58 Iss. 6 (2019) p. 548 - 559
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/catherine-forestell/56/