Sainz Martínez, MarioVázquez Botana, Alexandra2024-05-202024-05-2020230144-6665 eISSN 2044-8309https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12697https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14468/12740Less educated people are viewed negatively and their opinions are belittled in our society. Besides, along with other groups, they are underrepresented in the political arena which questions the legitimacy of democratic systems. Despite the existence of education-based devaluation, research on how people dehumanize individuals and groups with lesser education and minimize their democratic rights is scarce. In this project, we provide correlational evidence that less (vs. highly) educated individuals and groups are dehumanized (Study 1a, N = 304) and their democratic rights (voting, running for office) are questioned (Study 1b, N = 504). Furthermore, we identified that dehumanization tendencies of the less (vs. highly) educated targets predict support for denying them voting rights or the capability to run for public candidacies (Study 2, N = 447). Finally, an experimental study confirmed that the target's educational background influences attributions of humanity, which in turn seem to affect the denial of democratic rights to the target (Study 3, N = 470). These findings suggest that education- based dehumanization might undermine the inalienable democratic rights of lesser educated individuals and groups thus endangering the foundations of democratic systems.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessNot all ballots should be considered equal: How education-based dehumanization undermines the democratic social contractjournal articledehumanizationdemocratic rightseducation-based groupspublic candidaciesvoting