Whether a religious group membership is shared and salient influences perceived similarity, political support, and helping intention toward refugees, but not charitable donation

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Nihan Albayrak-Aydemir, Ilka Helene Gleibs
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This research investigates the ways in which (un)shared religious group memberships contribute to individual helping responses through perceived similarity in the context of a refugee emergency. Across three studies (N = 762), we examined religious sub-groups of British people's helping responses to religious subgroups of Syrian refugees, in quasi-experimental and experimental designs. Overall findings suggest that sharing a religious group membership with refugee targets increases perceived similarity, political support, and helping intention, but not charitable donation—regardless of shared group membership being subtle or salient. However, when refugee targets' religious identity is that of a salient unshared group membership, not sharing a religious group membership reduces perceived similarity, political support, and helping intention, among those who are religious—with again charitable donation remaining unchanged. These results provide critical insights into developing more effective and unique strategies to promote and mobilize support for refugees among different groups of potential helpers.

Abstract Image

宗教团体成员身份是否具有共同性和显著性会影响对难民的相似性认知、政治支持和帮助意愿,但不会影响慈善捐赠
本研究探讨了在难民紧急情况下,(非)共同的宗教团体成员身份如何通过感知到的相似性促进个人的帮助反应。通过三项研究(N = 762),我们采用准实验和实验设计,考察了英国人的宗教亚群对叙利亚难民宗教亚群的帮助反应。总体研究结果表明,与难民对象共享宗教团体成员身份会增加感知相似性、政治支持和帮助意向,但不会增加慈善捐赠--无论共享的团体成员身份是微妙的还是突出的。然而,当难民目标的宗教身份是一个突出的非共享群体成员身份时,不共享宗教群体成员身份会降低那些有宗教信仰的人的相似感、政治支持和帮助意向,而慈善捐赠则保持不变。这些结果为制定更有效、更独特的策略以促进和动员不同潜在帮助者群体对难民的支持提供了重要启示。
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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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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