Why Americans increasingly claim to own guns for self-protection: A modern culture of social-psychological threat defense

IF 4 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Group Processes & Intergroup Relations Pub Date : 2024-04-09 DOI:10.1177/13684302241240684
Wolfgang Stroebe, N. Pontus Leander
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Abstract

This article addresses two questions: (a) why do Americans believe that they need guns to defend themselves and their families and (b) why has the number of Americans who share this belief increased dramatically in recent decades? To address the first question, we describe a model of defensive gun ownership that assumes that Americans’ perceived need of a gun for self-defense is not only determined by their perceived lifetime risk of being assaulted (PLRA), but also by some diffuse belief in a dangerous world (BDW). In attempting to identify the dangerous world feared by high BDW gun owners, we review evidence that gun ownership is often associated with racial prejudice and concerns about groups that are stereotypically associated with safety threats (e.g., Black Americans, illegal immigrants). We identified three environmental changes that might exacerbate social threat perceptions: the proliferation of intergroup threat narratives such as the great replacement theory (that White Americans will be replaced by non-White minorities), the COVID-19 pandemic, and a change in the way the American gun industry advertises their products (praising the quality of their guns to emphasize the usefulness of guns for self-defense).
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为什么越来越多的美国人声称拥有枪支是为了自我保护?社会心理威胁防御的现代文化
本文探讨了两个问题:(a) 为什么美国人认为他们需要枪支来保护自己和家人;(b) 为什么近几十年来认同这一观点的美国人数量急剧增加?为了解决第一个问题,我们描述了一个防卫性拥枪模型,该模型假定美国人对自卫用枪需求的认识不仅取决于他们所认为的一生中遭受攻击的风险(PLRA),还取决于他们对危险世界的某种分散的信念(BDW)。在试图确定高 BDW 持枪者所担心的危险世界时,我们回顾了一些证据,这些证据表明,持枪往往与种族偏见以及对那些在刻板印象中与安全威胁相关的群体(如美国黑人、非法移民)的担忧有关。我们发现了三种可能会加剧社会威胁感的环境变化:群体间威胁论的扩散,如大替代理论(即美国白人将被非白人少数民族取代)、COVID-19 大流行以及美国枪支行业宣传其产品的方式的变化(赞扬其枪支质量以强调枪支在自卫中的作用)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
4.50%
发文量
76
期刊介绍: Group Processes & Intergroup Relations is a scientific social psychology journal dedicated to research on social psychological processes within and between groups. It provides a forum for and is aimed at researchers and students in social psychology and related disciples (e.g., organizational and management sciences, political science, sociology, language and communication, cross cultural psychology, international relations) that have a scientific interest in the social psychology of human groups. The journal has an extensive editorial team that includes many if not most of the leading scholars in social psychology of group processes and intergroup relations from around the world.
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