Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-6-2017

Publication Title

Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World

Department

Department of Sociology

Abstract

Scholars have recently become increasingly interested in understanding the prevalence and persistence of conspiratorial beliefs among the public as recent research has shown such beliefs to be both widespread and to have deleterious effects on the political process. This article seeks to develop a sociological understanding of the structural conditions that are associated with conspiratorial belief. Using aggregate Google search data to measure public interest in two popular political conspiracy theories, the findings indicate that social conditions associated with threat and insecurity, including unemployment, changes in partisan control of government, and demographic changes, are associated with increased conspiratorial ideation.

DOI

10.1177/2378023116689791

Included in

Sociology Commons

COinS