Increased perceived safety in day-to-day life relates to critical national identification

Stylianos Syropoulos, Kyle Fiore Law, B. Leidner
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Abstract

National identification consistently predicts attitudes within and between groups. Research indicating that threat perceptions often lead to compliance with ingroup authorities suggests that heightened threat perceptions may contribute to stronger submissive national identification. However, the impact of feeling safe on a more critical (in contrast to submissive) sense of national identification remains largely unexplored. Drawing on social safety theory and attachment theory, the present investigation examined whether individual differences in feeling of safety relate to increased critical and submissive/blind forms of national identification. Studies 1A–1B and 2A–2B utilized nationally representative data from large cross-national surveys, finding that greater perceived safety related to increased pride in, emotional attachment to, and closeness to one’s nation. In Studies 3–5, we found that feeling safe in daily life and believing that one is capable of protecting oneself relate to more ingroup attachment and glorification. Notably, the association for feeling of safety and ingroup attachment was larger than that for ingroup glorification. This investigation offers consistent evidence for a positive association between how safe people feel and national identification, highlighting that more research is needed to better understand how feeling of safety could influence intergroup processes.
提高日常生活中的安全感与关键的国家识别有关
国家认同一直预测着群体内部和群体之间的态度。有研究表明,威胁感往往会导致对内群体权威的服从,这表明威胁感的增强可能会导致更强烈的顺从型国家认同。然而,安全感对更具批判性(而非顺从性)的国家认同感的影响在很大程度上仍未得到探讨。本研究以社会安全理论和依恋理论为基础,探讨了安全感的个体差异是否与国家认同的批判性和顺从/盲从形式的增加有关。研究 1A-1B 和 2A-2B 利用了大型跨国调查中具有全国代表性的数据,发现安全感越强,对自己国家的自豪感、情感依恋和亲近感就越强。在研究 3-5 中,我们发现日常生活中的安全感和相信自己有能力保护自己与更多的内群体依恋和美化有关。值得注意的是,安全感与内群体依恋的关联大于内群体美化的关联。这项调查为人们的安全感与国家认同之间的正相关提供了一致的证据,强调需要进行更多的研究,以更好地了解安全感如何影响群体间进程。
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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