“Ins and outs”: Ethnic identity, the need to belong, and responses to inclusion and exclusion in inclusive common ingroups

IF 4 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Group Processes & Intergroup Relations Pub Date : 2024-09-14 DOI:10.1177/13684302241267982
Islam Borinca, Rita Guerra, Fitim Uka
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Abstract

An often overlooked aspect of intergroup relations is how people react to inclusion in a beneficial superordinate category. To examine this issue, we conducted four studies ( N = 1,686) in Kosovo about the European Union (EU), using adult (Studies 1, 3, 4) and adolescent (Study 2) samples. We employed experimental designs (Studies 1, 3, 4) and a two-wave longitudinal design (Study 2). In Studies 1–3, we assessed ethnic identification before exposing participants to one of three experimental conditions: inclusion in the superordinate category, exclusion, or a control. Results showed that individuals with low ethnic identification perceived less discrimination (i.e., less unfair treatment), greater metahumanization (i.e., being seen as equal), and less collective victimhood (i.e., lower feelings of being unjustly targeted) in the inclusion condition compared to exclusion or control conditions, whereas those with high ethnic identification exhibited the opposite reactions regardless of condition. In Study 4, we assessed the need to belong to the EU and ethnic identification before exposing participants to similar conditions. Results showed that individuals with a high need to belong to the EU perceived less discrimination, greater metahumanization, and lower collective victimhood in the inclusion condition compared to other conditions, regardless of ethnic identification. This pattern also held for those with a low need to belong to the EU and low ethnic identification. However, it did not appear for those with a low need to belong to the EU and high ethnic identification, whose reactions to inclusion differed from those of participants in other conditions. These effects were mediated by collective victimhood.
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"内部和外部":种族认同、归属需求以及对包容性共同群体中的包容和排斥的反应
群体间关系中经常被忽视的一个方面是,人们对被纳入有利的上位类别有何反应。为了研究这个问题,我们在科索沃进行了四项关于欧盟(EU)的研究(样本数 = 1,686),研究对象分别为成年人(研究 1、3、4)和青少年(研究 2)。我们采用了实验设计(研究 1、3、4)和两波纵向设计(研究 2)。在第 1-3 项研究中,我们在将参与者置于三种实验条件之一之前对其进行了种族认同评估:纳入上级类别、排除或对照。结果显示,与排斥或对照条件相比,种族认同度低的个体在融入条件下感受到的歧视较少(即不公平待遇较少),元人性化程度较高(即被视为平等),集体受害感较低(即被不公正地针对的感觉较低),而种族认同度高的个体无论在哪种条件下都表现出相反的反应。在研究 4 中,我们先评估了受试者对欧盟的归属感和种族认同感,然后再将他们置于类似的条件下。结果显示,与其他条件相比,无论种族认同如何,对欧盟归属感需求较高的个体在包容条件下感受到的歧视较少,元人性化程度较高,集体受害程度较低。这种模式也适用于那些对欧盟归属感需求较低和种族认同感较低的人。然而,对欧盟归属感需求较低和种族认同感较高的人却没有出现这种情况,他们对融入的反应与其他条件下的参与者不同。这些影响是由集体受害意识所调节的。
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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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Judgments toward displays of national (dis)loyalty in members of nations other than one’s own: Universalistic and parochial perspectives Two Paths to Violence: Individual versus Group Emotions during Conflict Escalation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories “Ins and outs”: Ethnic identity, the need to belong, and responses to inclusion and exclusion in inclusive common ingroups Divergent views of party positions: How ideology and own issue position shape party perception through convergence and divergence processes Corrigendum to “Tackling loneliness together: A three-tier social identity framework for social prescribing”
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