Persuasion or Co-creation? Social Identity Threat and the Mechanisms of Deliberative Transformation

G. Wright
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Deliberation’s effectiveness as a method of problem solving and democratic decision making is often seen as stemming from the persuasive power of the “forceless force” of argument to transform beliefs. However, because conflicts related to partisan polarization, conspiracy theories, and the COVID-19 pandemic often have deep connections to social identity, they may be difficult to resolve through a deliberative approach based on persuasion. Research shows that when the conclusions of an argument threaten participants’ social identities they are likely to engage in motivated reasoning, which inhibits the ability of any argument to induce belief change. In conflicts closely related to social identity a deliberative approach based around co-creation — such as Mary Parker Follett’s conception of integration — may be more productive than persuasion-based approaches. The contrast between these two approaches is illustrated in reference to contemporary conflicts between vaccine advocates and members of the “vaccine hesitancy and refusal” (VHR) community.
说服还是共同创造?社会认同威胁与协商转化机制
作为解决问题和民主决策的一种方法,审议的有效性通常被视为源于辩论改变信念的“无强迫力量”的说服力。但是,党派性两极化、阴谋论、新冠疫情等相关矛盾往往与社会认同有很深的联系,因此很难通过以说服为基础的协商方式解决。研究表明,当争论的结论威胁到参与者的社会身份时,他们可能会进行有动机的推理,这抑制了任何争论引起信仰改变的能力。在与社会身份密切相关的冲突中,以共同创造为基础的协商方法——比如玛丽·帕克·福莱特的整合概念——可能比以说服为基础的方法更有成效。这两种方法之间的对比可以通过参考疫苗倡导者与“疫苗犹豫和拒绝”(VHR)社区成员之间的当代冲突来说明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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