Cross-cultural evidence that intergroup conflict heightens preferences for dominant leaders: A 25-country study

  • Lasse Laustsen*
  • , Sheng Xiaotian
  • , M. Ghufran Ahmad
  • , Laith Al-Shawaf
  • , Benjamin Banai
  • , Irena Pavela Banai
  • , Michael Barlev
  • , Nicolas Bastardoz
  • , Alexander Bor
  • , Joey T. Cheng
  • , Anna Chmielińska
  • , Alexandra Cook
  • , Kyriaki Fousiani
  • , Zachary H. Garfield
  • , Maliki E. Ghossainy
  • , E. Ha Shang
  • , Ji Tingting
  • , Benedict C. Jones
  • , Michal Kandrik
  • , Catherine Chiugo Kanu
  • Douglas T. Kenrick, Tobias Kordsmeyer, Cristhian Martínez Moreno, Honorata Mazepus, Jiaqing O, Ike E. Onyishi, Boguslaw Pawlowski, Lars Penke, Michael B. Petersen, Richard Ronay, Daniel Sznycer, Gonzalo Palomo Vélez, Christopher R. von Rueden, Israel Waismel-Manor, Adi Wiezel, Mark Van Vugt
*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    4 Citations (Scopus)
    92 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Across societies and across history, seemingly dominant, authoritarian leaders have emerged frequently, often rising to power based on widespread popular support. One prominent theory holds that evolved psychological mechanisms of followership regulate citizens' leadership preferences such that dominant individuals are intuitively attributed leadership qualities when followers face intergroup conflicts like war. A key hypothesis based on this theory is that followers across the world should upregulate their preferences for dominant leaders the more they perceive the present situation as conflict-ridden. From this conflict hypothesis, we generate and test four concrete predictions using a novel dataset including 5008 participants residing in 25 countries from different world regions (consisting of a mix of convenience and approximately representative country-specific samples). Specifically, we combine experimental techniques, validated psychological scales, and macro-level indicators of intergroup conflict to gauge people's preferences for dominant leadership. Across four independent tests, results broadly support the notion that the presence of intergroup conflict increases follower preferences for dominant leaders. Thus, our results provide robust cross-cultural support for the existence of an adaptive, tribal followership psychology, a finding that has various implications for understanding contemporary politics and international relations.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number106674
    Number of pages12
    JournalEvolution and Human Behavior
    Volume46
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May-2025

    Keywords

    • Leadership
    • Dominant leaders
    • Intergroup conflict
    • Followership psychology
    • Survey experiment
    • Cross-cultural data

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