TY - JOUR
T1 - Alternative Measures of Political Efficacy
T2 - The Quest for Cross-Cultural Invariance With Ordinally Scaled Survey Items
AU - Scotto, Thomas J.
AU - Xena, Carla
AU - Reifler, Jason
PY - 2021/7/16
Y1 - 2021/7/16
N2 - In this paper, we examine the measurement of citizens’ beliefs that politicians and political systems are responsive (external efficacy) and that citizens see themselves sufficiently skilled to participate in politics (internal efficacy). This paper demonstrates techniques that allow researchers to establish the cross-context validity of conceptually important ordinal scales. In so doing, we show an alternative set of efficacy indicators to those commonly appearing on cross-national surveys to be more promising from a validity standpoint. Through detailed discussion and application of multi-group analysis for ordinal measures, we demonstrate that a measurement model linking latent internal and external efficacy factors performs well in configural and parameter invariance testing when applied to representative samples of respondents in the United States and Great Britain. With near full invariance achieved, differences in latent variable means are meaningful and British respondents are shown to have lower levels of both forms of efficacy than their American counterparts. We argue that this technique may be particularly valuable for scholars who wish to establish the suitability of ordinal scales for direct comparison across nations or cultures.
AB - In this paper, we examine the measurement of citizens’ beliefs that politicians and political systems are responsive (external efficacy) and that citizens see themselves sufficiently skilled to participate in politics (internal efficacy). This paper demonstrates techniques that allow researchers to establish the cross-context validity of conceptually important ordinal scales. In so doing, we show an alternative set of efficacy indicators to those commonly appearing on cross-national surveys to be more promising from a validity standpoint. Through detailed discussion and application of multi-group analysis for ordinal measures, we demonstrate that a measurement model linking latent internal and external efficacy factors performs well in configural and parameter invariance testing when applied to representative samples of respondents in the United States and Great Britain. With near full invariance achieved, differences in latent variable means are meaningful and British respondents are shown to have lower levels of both forms of efficacy than their American counterparts. We argue that this technique may be particularly valuable for scholars who wish to establish the suitability of ordinal scales for direct comparison across nations or cultures.
KW - cross-cultural validity
KW - latent variable analyses
KW - political efficacy
KW - structural equation analyses
KW - survey research
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125351330&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://reshare.ukdataservice.ac.uk/851142/
U2 - 10.3389/fpos.2021.665532
DO - 10.3389/fpos.2021.665532
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125351330
SN - 2673-3145
VL - 3
JO - Frontiers in Political Science
JF - Frontiers in Political Science
M1 - 665532
ER -