
@article{ref1,
title="The Interest in Evil: Hierarchic Self-Interest and Right-Wing Extremism among East and West German Youth",
journal="Social science research",
year="1999",
author="Hagan, John and Rippl, Susanne and Boehnke, Klaus and Merkens, Hans",
volume="28",
number="2",
pages="162-183",
abstract="Right-wing extremist attitudes can seem rational when they are viewed from the near-term, group-linked interests of individuals in their own well-being, ascendency, or domination. We test an elaboration of a rational choice theory of right-wing extremism that focuses on hierarchic and self-interested imperatives in market-driven societies. Our elaboration of this theory identifies a theoretical and empirical unification of four social psychological dimensions--involving competitive processes of social comparison, individualism, materialist preoccupations with success, and the acceptance of social inequality. These dimensions coalesce into a higher order, latent subterranean construct we call hierarchic self-interest. This latent construct is strongly related to right-wing extremism among samples of East and West German youth. Male adolescents experiencing the rapid transition to a market economy in an economically and socially depressed East Germany may be especially susceptible to extremist appeals to hierarchic self-interests. Male and East German youth express stronger hierarchic self-interests than female and West German youth, and these differences mediate the greater tendencies of male and East German youth to express hostility toward immigrants and foreigners, who are often a step below and in competition with them on the socioeconomic ladder of success. Hierarchic self-interest is a persistent and dangerous source of support for right-wing extremism.<p />",
language="en",
issn="0049-089X",
doi="10.1006/ssre.1998.0637",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/ssre.1998.0637"
}