Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Ho Ho, Sidanius Sidanius, Pratto Pratto, Levin Levin, Thomsen Thomsen, Kteily Kteily, Sheehy‐Skeffington Sheehy‐Skeffington (2012)
Social dominance orientation: Revisiting the structure and function of a variable predicting social and political attitudesPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 38
Jesse Chandler, Pam Mueller, Gabriele Paolacci (2014)
Nonnaïveté among Amazon Mechanical Turk workers: Consequences and solutions for behavioral researchersBehavior Research Methods, 46
J. Duckitt, C. Sibley (2010)
Right–Wing Authoritarianism and Social Dominance Orientation Differentially Moderate Intergroup Effects on PrejudiceEuropean Journal of Personality, 24
B. Doosje, N. Ellemers, R. Spears (1995)
PERCEIVED INTRAGROUP VARIABILITY AS A FUNCTION OF GROUP STATUS AND IDENTIFICATIONJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 31
P. Curran, S. West, J. Finch (1996)
The robustness of test statistics to nonnormality and specification error in confirmatory factor analysis.Psychological Methods, 1
Li-tze Hu, P. Bentler (1999)
Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternativesStructural Equation Modeling, 6
Ana-Maria Bliuc, C. McGarty, Katherine Reynolds, Daniela Muntele (2007)
Opinion‐based group membership as a predictor of commitment to political actionEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 37
J. Sidanius, F. Pratto (1999)
Social Dominance: An Intergroup Theory of Social Hierarchy and Oppression
K. Deaux, A. Reid, Daniela Martin, Nida Bikmen (2006)
Ideologies of Diversity and Inequality: Predicting Collective Action in Groups Varying in Ethnicity and Immigrant StatusPolitical Psychology, 27
Kenneth Mavor, W. Louis, C. Sibley (2010)
A bias-corrected exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis of right-wing authoritarianism: Support for a three-factor structurePersonality and Individual Differences, 48
Emina Subašić, Michael Schmitt, Katherine Reynolds (2011)
Are we all in this together?: co-victimization,inclusive social identity and collective action in solidarity with the disadvantaged.The British journal of social psychology, 50 4
Emina Subašić, Katherine Reynolds, J. Turner (2008)
The Political Solidarity Model of Social Change: Dynamics of Self-Categorization in Intergroup Power RelationsPersonality and Social Psychology Review, 12
N. Ellemers, B. Doosje, A. Knippenberg, H. Wilke (1992)
Status protection in high status minority groupsEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 22
Ryan Perry, C. Sibley (2013)
A Dual‐Process Motivational Model of Social and Economic Policy AttitudesAnalyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 13
Stefan Sturmer, B. Simon (2004)
Collective action: Towards a dual-pathway modelEuropean Review of Social Psychology, 15
J. Duckitt, C. Sibley (2010)
Personality, ideology, prejudice, and politics: a dual-process motivational model.Journal of personality, 78 6
C. Leach, Aarti Iyer, Anne Pedersen (2007)
Angry opposition to government redress: when the structurally advantaged perceive themselves as relatively deprived.The British journal of social psychology, 46 Pt 1
J. Duckitt (2006)
Differential Effects of Right Wing Authoritarianism and Social Dominance Orientation on Outgroup Attitudes and Their Mediation by Threat From and Competitiveness to OutgroupsPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32
Gerhard Reese, Jutta Proch, J. Cohrs (2014)
Individual Differences in Responses to Global InequalityAnalyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 14
Buhrmester Buhrmester, Kwang Kwang, Gosling Gosling (2011)
Amazon's Mechanical Turk: A new source of inexpensive, yet high?quality, data?Perspectives on Psychological Science, 6
J. Turner, P. Oakes, S. Haslam, C. McGarty (1994)
Self and Collective: Cognition and Social ContextPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 20
B. Altemeyer (1996)
The Authoritarian Specter
Stephen Wright, Donald Taylor, F. Moghaddam (1990)
Responding to membership in a disadvantaged group : from acceptance to collective protestJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, 58
B. Simon, B. Klandermans (2001)
Politicized collective identity. A social psychological analysis.The American psychologist, 56 4
J. Duckitt, C. Sibley (2009)
A Dual-Process Motivational Model of Ideology, Politics, and PrejudicePsychological Inquiry, 20
C. Leach, Martijn Zomeren, Sven Zebel, Michael Vliek, S. Pennekamp, B. Doosje, Jaap Ouwerkerk, R. Spears (2008)
Group-level self-definition and self-investment: a hierarchical (multicomponent) model of in-group identification.Journal of personality and social psychology, 95 1
R. Little (1988)
A Test of Missing Completely at Random for Multivariate Data with Missing ValuesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 83
Zomeren Zomeren, Postmes Postmes, Spears Spears, Bettache Bettache (2011)
Can moral convictions motivate the advantaged to challenge social inequality? Extending the social identity model of collective actionGroup Processes & Intergroup Relations, 14
Aarti Iyer, T. Schmader, Brian Lickel (2007)
Why Individuals Protest the Perceived Transgressions of Their CountryPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 33
H. Tajfel, J. Turner (1979)
An integrative theory of intergroup conflict.
M. Hornsey, Leda Blackwood, W. Louis, K. Fielding, Kenneth Mavor, T. Morton, A. O’Brien, Karl-Erik Paasonen, Joanne Smith, K. White (2006)
Why do people engage in collective action? Revisiting the role of perceived effectiveness
Martijn Zomeren, R. Spears, A. Fischer, C. Leach (2004)
Put your money where your mouth is! Explaining collective action tendencies through group-based anger and group efficacy.Journal of personality and social psychology, 87 5
S. Reicher, N. Hopkins (1996)
Self‐category constructions in political rhetoric; an analysis of Thatcher's and Kinnock's speeches concerning the British miners' strike (1984–5)European Journal of Social Psychology, 26
Emma Thomas, C. McGarty, Kenneth Mavor (2009)
Aligning Identities, Emotions, and Beliefs to Create Commitment to Sustainable Social and Political ActionPersonality and Social Psychology Review, 13
Robyn Mallett, Jeffrey Huntsinger, S. Sinclair, J. Swim (2008)
Seeing Through Their Eyes: When Majority Group Members Take Collective Action on Behalf of an OutgroupGroup Processes & Intergroup Relations, 11
S. Passini, D. Morselli (2013)
The triadic legitimacy model: Understanding support to disobedient groupsNew Ideas in Psychology, 31
C. Sibley, Marc Wilson, J. Duckitt (2007)
Antecedents of Men’s Hostile and Benevolent Sexism: The Dual Roles of Social Dominance Orientation and Right-Wing AuthoritarianismPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 33
J. Duckitt, C. Sibley (2007)
Right wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation and the dimensions of generalized prejudiceEuropean Journal of Personality, 21
M. Berndsen, C. McGarty (2012)
Perspective Taking and Opinions About Forms of Reparation for Victims of Historical HarmPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 38
Lotte Thomsen, E. Green, J. Sidanius (2008)
We will hunt them down: How social dominance orientation and right-wing authoritarianism fuel ethnic persecution of immigrants in fundamentally different waysJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 44
Matthew Crump, John McDonnell, T. Gureckis (2013)
Evaluating Amazon's Mechanical Turk as a Tool for Experimental Behavioral ResearchPLoS ONE, 8
Shruti Tewari, Sammyh Khan, N. Hopkins, N. Srinivasan, S. Reicher (2012)
Participation in Mass Gatherings Can Benefit Well-Being: Longitudinal and Control Data from a North Indian Hindu Pilgrimage EventPLoS ONE, 7
Michael Buhrmester, T. Kwang, S. Gosling (2011)
Amazon's Mechanical TurkPerspectives on Psychological Science, 6
Rachel McDonald, K. Fielding, W. Louis (2013)
Energizing and De-Motivating Effects of Norm-ConflictPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 39
Martijn Zomeren, T. Postmes, R. Spears, Karim Bettache (2011)
Can moral convictions motivate the advantaged to challenge social inequality?Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 14
Stephen Wright (2009)
The Next Generation of Collective Action ResearchJournal of Social Issues, 65
B. Duriez, A. Hiel, M. Kossowska (2005)
Authoritarianism and Social Dominance in Western and Eastern Europe: The Importance of the Sociopolitical Context and of Political Interest and InvolvementPolitical Psychology, 26
J. Jost, Christopher Federico, Jaime Napier (2009)
Political ideology: its structure, functions, and elective affinities.Annual review of psychology, 60
(2010)
Structural equation modeling with AMOS: Basic concepts, applications, and programming (2nd ed.)
Martijn Zomeren, C. Leach, R. Spears (2012)
Protesters as “Passionate Economists”Personality and Social Psychology Review, 16
D. Ward (1982)
Right-Wing AuthoritarianismAmerican Political Science Review, 76
Emma Thomas, C. McGarty, Kenneth Mavor (2010)
Social psychology of Making Poverty History: Motivating anti‐poverty action in AustraliaAustralian Psychologist, 45
M. Zomeren (2013)
Four Core Social‐Psychological Motivations to Undertake Collective ActionSocial and Personality Psychology Compass, 7
C. Leach, N. Snider, Aarti Iyer (2002)
"Poisoning the consciences of the fortunate": The experience of relative advantage and support for social equality
B. Klandermans, Dirk Oegema (1987)
POTENTIALS, NETWORKS, MOTIVATIONS, AND BARRIERS: STEPS TOWARDS PARTICIPATION IN SOCIAL MOVEMENTS *American Sociological Review, 52
Joseph Goodman, Cynthia Cryder, Amar Cheema (2013)
Data collection in a flat world: the strengths and weaknesses of mechanical turk samplesJournal of Behavioral Decision Making, 26
Martijn Zomeren, T. Postmes, R. Spears (2008)
Toward an integrative social identity model of collective action: a quantitative research synthesis of three socio-psychological perspectives.Psychological bulletin, 134 4
Zomeren Zomeren, Leach Leach, Spears Spears (2012)
Protesters as ?passionate economists?: A dynamic dual pathway model of approach coping with collective disadvantagePersonality and Social Psychology Review, 16
Iyer Iyer, Schmader Schmader, Lickel Lickel (2007)
Why individuals protest the perceived transgressions of their country: The role of anger, shame, and guiltPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 33
Arnold Ho, J. Sidanius, F. Pratto, Shana Levin, Lotte Thomsen, Nour Kteily, J. Sheehy‐Skeffington (2012)
Social Dominance OrientationPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 38
F. Pratto, J. Sidanius, Lisa Stallworth, B. Malle (1994)
Social dominance orientation: A personality variable predicting social and political attitudes.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 67
Christopher Federico, J. Sidanius (2002)
Racism, ideology, and affirmative action revisited: the antecedents and consequences of "principled objections" to affirmative action.Journal of personality and social psychology, 82 4
Rachel McDonald, K. Fielding, W. Louis (2014)
Conflicting Norms Highlight the Need for ActionEnvironment and Behavior, 46
Members of groups in conflict may take collective action: actions to improve conditions for their group as a whole. The psychological antecedents of collective action for groups that are party to conflict and inequality are well‐established. Comparatively little is known about how uninvolved outsiders respond to an external intergroup conflict. We investigate how personal ideological orientations of Social Dominance Orientation (SDO) and Right‐Wing Authoritarianism (RWA) shape outsiders’ willingness to take collective action in support of groups engaged in external conflict. In Study 1, U.S. residents read about conflicts between disadvantaged citizens and an advantaged government in Greece and Russia. In Study 2, U.S. residents read about a similar conflict in a fictional country, Silaria. Path analyses revealed that SDO and RWA shaped psychological appraisals of the conflict contexts, which predicted intentions to take collective action on behalf of either group. SDO and RWA were positively associated with advantaged group identification and anger at a disadvantaged group, and negatively associated with disadvantaged group identification and anger at an advantaged group. Group identification and anger predicted subsequent collective action intentions on behalf of either group. The sensitivity of outsiders’ appraisals to ideological orientations suggests strategies for both advantaged and disadvantaged groups to recruit outsiders as allies in group conflict.
Analyses of Social Issues & Public Policy – Wiley
Published: Dec 1, 2015
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.