TY - JOUR
T1 - Support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies
T2 - Modelling the role of attitudes toward poverty alongside weight stigma, causal attributions about weight, and prejudice
AU - Swami, Viren
AU - Voracek, Martin
AU - Furnham, Adrian
AU - Robinson, Charlotte
AU - Tran, Ulrich S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - In the present study, we sought to position support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies within a broader political and socioeconomic context. Specifically, we hypothesised that individualistic (rather than structural) anti-poverty attitudes would provide the basis for negative weight-related dispositions. To test this hypothesis, we asked 392 respondents from the United Kingdom to complete measures of support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies, attributions about the causes of being larger-bodied, and weight-related stigma and prejudice. Path analysis with robust maximum likelihood estimation indicated that greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly and directly associated with lower support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies. This direct association was also significantly mediated by weight-related stigma and via a serial mediation involving both weight-related stigma and prejudice. Although greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly associated with greater personal attributions for being larger-bodied, the latter did not emerge as a significant mediation pathway. The present findings highlight the importance of considering broader political and socioeconomic contextual factors that may provide a basis for the development, maintenance, and manifestation of negative weight-related dispositions.
AB - In the present study, we sought to position support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies within a broader political and socioeconomic context. Specifically, we hypothesised that individualistic (rather than structural) anti-poverty attitudes would provide the basis for negative weight-related dispositions. To test this hypothesis, we asked 392 respondents from the United Kingdom to complete measures of support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies, attributions about the causes of being larger-bodied, and weight-related stigma and prejudice. Path analysis with robust maximum likelihood estimation indicated that greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly and directly associated with lower support for weight-related anti-discrimination laws and policies. This direct association was also significantly mediated by weight-related stigma and via a serial mediation involving both weight-related stigma and prejudice. Although greater individualistic anti-poverty attitudes were significantly associated with greater personal attributions for being larger-bodied, the latter did not emerge as a significant mediation pathway. The present findings highlight the importance of considering broader political and socioeconomic contextual factors that may provide a basis for the development, maintenance, and manifestation of negative weight-related dispositions.
KW - Individualistic attitudes
KW - Mediation
KW - Path analysis
KW - Poverty
KW - Prejudice
KW - Stigma
KW - Weight-related laws
KW - Weight-related policies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85153519613&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bodyim.2023.04.005
DO - 10.1016/j.bodyim.2023.04.005
M3 - Article
C2 - 37116305
AN - SCOPUS:85153519613
SN - 1740-1445
VL - 45
SP - 391
EP - 400
JO - Body Image
JF - Body Image
ER -