Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
4-2021
Abstract
Fighting the COVID‐19 pandemic requires large numbers of citizens to adopt disease‐preventive practices. We contend that national identification can mobilize and motivate people to engage in preventive behaviors to protect the collective, which in return would heighten national identification further. To test these reciprocal links, we conducted studies in two countries with diverse national tactics toward curbing the pandemic: (1) a two‐wave longitudinal survey in China (Study 1, N = 1200), where a national goal to fight COVID‐19 was clearly set, and (2) a five‐wave longitudinal survey in the United States (Study 2, N = 1001), where the national leader, President Trump, rejected the severity of COVID‐19 in its early stage. Results revealed that national identification was associated with an increase in disease‐preventive behaviors in both countries in general. However, higher national identification was associated with greater trust in Trump's administration among politically conservative American participants, which then was associated with slower adoption of preventive behaviors. The reciprocal effect of disease‐preventive behaviors on national identification was observed only in China. Overall, our findings suggest that although national identification may serve as a protective factor in curbing the pandemic, this beneficial effect was reduced in some political contexts.
Keywords
COVID-19, pandemic, national identification, national discourse, disease-preventive behavior, disease prevention, social identity approach
Discipline
Asian Studies | Health Policy | Medicine and Health | Public Health
Research Areas
Strategy and Organisation
Publication
Political Psychology
Volume
42
Issue
5
First Page
767
Last Page
793
ISSN
0162-895X
Identifier
10.1111/pops.12752
Publisher
Wiley: 24 months
Citation
CHAN, Hoi-Wing; WANG, Xue; ZUO, Shi-Jiang; CHIU, Connie Pui-Yee; LIU, Li; YIU, Daphne W.; and HONG, Ying-yi.
War Against COVID-19: How Is National Identification Linked With the Adoption of Disease-Preventive Behaviors in China and the United States?. (2021). Political Psychology. 42, (5), 767-793.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/7316
Copyright Owner and License
Publisher
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12752
Included in
Asian Studies Commons, Health Policy Commons, Medicine and Health Commons, Public Health Commons