Cognitive Salience of Subjugation and the Ideological Justification of U.S. Geopolitical Dominance in Japan |
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Authors: | Kasumi Yoshimura Curtis D. Hardin |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Brooklyn College & Graduate Center, City University of New York, Brooklyn, NY, USA
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Abstract: | To explore the causal role of cognition about subjugation in the justification of the geopolitical status quo, Japanese attitudes about U.S.–Japan relations were assessed after experimentally making salient either Japan’s dominance or subjugation regarding the United States. In addition, participants completed measures of ideology, including system justification, social dominance orientation, and right-wing authoritarianism. Results demonstrated that those reminded of Japan’s geopolitical subjugation to (but not dominance over) the U.S. endorsed U.S. hegemony to the degree that system justification motivation was high. Findings suggest that (a) international hierarchies have attitudinal consequences that may be especially pronounced among those who endorse the status quo, and (b) current Japanese policy-related attitudes are influenced by the salience of U.S. hegemony in Japan. |
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