Asymmetries in responses to group-based relative deprivation: The moderating effects of group status on endorsement of right-wing ideology

Kieren J. Lilly, C. Sibley, D. Osborne
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Feelings of group-based relative deprivation (GRD) motivate collective responses to defend the ingroup. As such, there may be status-based asymmetries in the associations GRD has with ideologies that perpetuate inequality—namely, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) and social dominance orientation (SDO). Study 1 examined this hypothesis using a national sample of adults ( N = 41,007) and revealed that the correlations GRD had with RWA and SDO were positive among members of a high-status group but negative among members of low-status groups. Study 2 examined these associations longitudinally ( N = 22,083) across eight annual assessments. Although a traditional cross-lagged panel analysis identified status-based asymmetries in the longitudinal associations between our variables of interest, analyses partitioning between-person stability from within-person change found no evidence that GRD leads to differences in RWA or SDO (or vice versa). The theoretical and practical implications of these results are discussed.
群体相对剥夺反应的不对称性:群体地位对右翼意识形态支持的调节作用
基于群体的相对剥夺感(GRD)激发了集体保护内部群体的反应。因此,GRD与延续不平等的意识形态(即右翼威权主义(RWA)和社会支配取向(SDO))之间的联系可能存在基于地位的不对称。研究1使用全国成年人样本(N = 41,007)检验了这一假设,发现GRD与RWA和SDO的相关性在地位高的群体中呈正相关,而在地位低的群体中呈负相关。研究2通过8次年度评估纵向检查了这些关联(N = 22,083)。虽然传统的交叉滞后面板分析在我们感兴趣的变量之间的纵向关联中确定了基于状态的不对称性,但分析从个人内部变化中划分人与人之间的稳定性发现没有证据表明GRD会导致RWA或SDO的差异(反之亦然)。讨论了这些结果的理论和实际意义。
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