4.4 Article

Do I Think BLS Data are BS? The Consequences of Conspiracy Theories

Journal

POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 679-701

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11109-014-9287-z

Keywords

Conspiracy theories; Trust in government; Experiments; Misinformation

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While the willingness of people to believe unfounded and conspiratorial explanations of events is fascinating and troubling, few have addressed the broader impacts of the dissemination of conspiracy claims. We use survey experiments to assess whether realistic exposure to a conspiracy claim affects conspiracy beliefs and trust in government. These experiments yield interesting and potentially surprising results. We discover that respondents who are asked whether they believe in a conspiracy claim after reading a specific allegation actually report lower beliefs than those not exposed to the specific claim. Turning to trust in government, we find that exposure to a conspiracy claim has a potent negative effect on trust in government services and institutions including those unconnected to the allegations. Moreover, and consistent with our belief experiment, we find that first asking whether people believe in the conspiracy mitigates the negative trust effects. Combining these findings suggests that conspiracy exposure increases conspiracy beliefs and reduces trust, but that asking about beliefs prompts additional thinking about the claims which softens and/or reverses the exposure's effect on beliefs and trust.

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