Attitudes towards foreign policy have typically been explained by ideological and demographic factors. We approach this study from a different perspective and ex amine the extent to which foreign policy preferences correspond to genetic variation. Using data from the Minnesota Twin Family Study, we show that a moderate share of individual differences in the degree to which one's foreign policy preferences are hawkish or dovish can be attributed to genetic variation. We also show, based on a bivariate twin model, that foreign policy preferences share a common genetic source of variation with political ideology. This result presents the possibility that ideology may be the causal pathway through which genes affect foreign policy preferences. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Cranmer, S. J., & Dawes, C. T. (2012, February). The heritability of foreign policy preferences. Twin Research and Human Genetics. https://doi.org/10.1375/twin.15.1.52
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