France Political psychology originated from Western Europe, France, where it was closely tied to the emergence of new disciplines and paradigms as well as to the precise social and political context in various countries. The discipline political psychology was formally introduced during the
Franco-Prussian war and the socialist revolution, stirred by the rise of the
Paris Commune (1871). The term
political psychology was first introduced by the
ethnologist Adolf Bastian in his book
Man in History (1860). The philosopher
Hippolyte Taine (1828–1893), a founder of the Ecole Libre de Sciences Politiques, applied Bastian's theories in his works
The Origins of Contemporary France (1875–1893), to ideas on the founding and development of the
Third Republic. The head of Ecole Libre de Sciences Politiques,
Émile Boutmy (1835–1906), was a famous explorer of social, political and geographical concepts of national interactions. He contributed various works on political psychology such as
English People; A study of their Political Psychology (1901) and
The American People; Elements of Their Political Psychology (1902). The contributor of
crowd theory Gustave Le Bon (1841–1931) suggested that crowd activity subdued will and polluted rational thought which resulted in uncontrollable impulses and emotions. He suggested in his works
Psychology of Socialism (1896) and
Political Psychology and Social Defense (1910) that in the uncontrollable state of a crowd people were more vulnerable to submission and leadership, and suggested that embracing
nationalism would remedy this.
Italy Meanwhile, in Italy, the
Risorgimento (1870) instigated various social reforms and voting rights. The large division in social class during this period led lawyer
Gaetano Mosca (1858–1914) to publish his work,
The Ruling Class: Elements of Political Science (1896), which theorized the presence of the ruling and the ruled classes of all societies.
Vilfredo Pareto (1828–1923), inspired by Mosca's concepts, contributed
The Rise and Fall of the Elites (1901) and
The Socialist System (1902–1903) to the discipline of political psychology, theorizing on the role of class and social systems. His work
The Mind and Society (1916) offers a sociology
treatise. Mosca and Pareto's texts on the Italian elite contributed to the theories of
Robert Michels (1875–1936). Michels was a German socialist fascinated by the distinction between the largely lower class run parliament in Germany and upper class run parliament in Italy. He wrote
Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the Oligarchic Tendencies of Modern Democracy (1911).
Austria A large psychoanalytical influence was contributed to the discipline of political psychology by
Sigmund Freud (1856–1939). His texts
Totem and Taboo (1913) and
Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego (1921) linked psychoanalysis with politics. Freud and
Bullitt (1967) developed the first psycho-biographical explanation to how the personality characteristics of U.S. President
Woodrow Wilson affected his decision making during World War I.
Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957), inspired by the effects of World War II, was interested in whether personality types varied according to epoch, culture and class. He described the bidirectional effect of group, society and the environment with personality. He combined Freudian and
Marxist theories in his book
The Mass Psychology of Fascism (1933). He also edited
The Journal for Political Psychology and Sexual Economy (1934–1938) which was the first journal to present political psychology in the principal of western language.
Germany In Germany, novice political alterations and
fascist control during World War II spurred research into authoritarianism from
Frankfurt School. Philosopher
Herbert Marcuse (1898–1979) opened up issues concerning freedom and authority in his book,
Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise of Social Theory (1941), where he suggested groups compromise on individual rights.
Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969) also investigated authoritarian individuals and anti-Semitism. His report
The Authoritarian Personality (1950) attempts to determine the personality type susceptible to following fascism and anti-democratic propaganda. Nazi movements during World War II also spurred controversial psychologists such as
Walther Poppelreuter (1932) to lecture and write about political psychology that identified with Hitler. The psychologist
Eric Jaensch (1883–1940) contributed the racist book
The Anti-type (1933).
United Kingdom At the turn of the century,
Oxford University and
Cambridge University introduced disciplinary political psychology courses such as "The Sciences of the Man", along with the foundation of the Psychological society (1901) and the Sociological society (1904). Oxford historian
George Beardoe Grundy (1861–1948) noted political psychology (1917) as a sub-discipline of history. Motivated by social and political behavior during World War I, he deemed a new branch of historical science, "The Psychology of Men Acting in Masses". He referred to science to instrument the clarification of mistaken beliefs about intention. The intellectual
Graham Wallas (1859–1932) implicated the significance of studying psychology in politics in
Human Nature in Politics (1908). Wallace emphasized the importance of enlightening politicians and the public about the psychological processes in order to raise awareness on exploitation while developing control over one's own psychological intellect. He suggested in
Great Society (1917) that recognition of such processes could help to build a more functional humanity.
United States Across the Atlantic the first American to be considered a political psychologist was
Harold Lasswell (1902–1978) whose research was also spurred by a sociological fascination of World War I. His work
Propaganda Technique in the World War (1927) discussed the use of applying psychological theories in order to enhance propaganda technique. Lasswell moved to Europe shortly after where he started to tie Freudian and Adler personality theories to politics and published
Psychopathology and Politics (1930). His major theories involved the motives of the politically active and the relation between propaganda and personality. Another contributing factor to the development of Political Psychology was the introduction of psychometrics and "The Measurement of Attitude" by
Thurstone and
Chave (1929). The methodological revolution in social science gave quantitative grounds and therefore more credibility to Political Psychology. Research into political preference during campaigns was spurred by
George Gallup (1901–1984), who founded the "American Institute of Public Opinion". The 1940s election in America drew a lot of attention in connection with the start of World War II. Gallup, Roper and Crossley instigated research into the chances of Roosevelt being re-elected. Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet (1944) also conducted a famous panel study "The People's Choice" on the 1940s election campaign. These studies drew attention to the possibility of measuring political techniques using psychological theories. The entry of the US into World War II spiraled vast research into fields such as war technique, propaganda, group moral, psycho-biography and culture conflict to name a few, with the U.S. army and Navy recruiting young psychologists. Thus the discipline quickly developed and gained international accreditation.
Hadley Cantril and
L. A. Free established the Institute for International Social Research to focus "attention primarily on psychological changes which influence political behavior in ways that have significant effect on international relations." They studied "governments and why, in terms of psychological variables, they behave as they do in regard to international issues." McGuire identifies three broad phases in the development of political psychology, these three phases are: (1) The era of
personality studies in the 1940s and 1950s dominated by psychoanalysis. (2) The era of
political attitudes and voting behavior studies in the 1960s and 1970s characterized by the popularity of "rational man" assumptions. (3) An era since the 1980s and 1990s, which has focused on
political beliefs, information processing and decision making, and has dealt in particular with international politics. ==Personality and politics==