Solidarity Matters: Prototypicality and Minority and Majority Adherence to National COVID-19 Health Advice

IF 2 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Aoife-Marie Foran, J. Roth, Sarah Jay, Siobhán M. Griffin, P. Maher, Cillian McHugh, Daragh Bradshaw, Megan Ryan, M. Quayle, O. Muldoon
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

The effectiveness of measures introduced to minimise the spread of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome CoronaVirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19) depends on compliance from all members of society. The Irish response to COVID-19 has been framed as a collective effort, fostering national solidarity. However, dominant representations of the national community often unreflexively reaffirm the prototypicality of majority group members, implicitly marginalizing minority group members. This may have implications for adherence behaviours. We propose that majority/minority membership of the national community predicts adherence to COVID-19 health advice via prototypicality and national solidarity. In Study 1, we collected data online from Irish residents (N = 1,185) during the first wave of restrictions in Ireland's response. In Study 2, we collected data from Irish residents (N = 537) during the second wave of restrictions, with more targeted sampling of minority groups. Based on these two studies, there is no difference between minority and majority group members' adherence behaviours. However, mediation analysis showed that greater adherence to COVID-19 health advice is shown when group members perceive themselves to be prototypical of the Irish national community, and thereby show greater national solidarity. In Study 3, we manipulated an appeal to adhere to restrictions (N = 689) and show that an inclusive solidarity appeal increased reported intentions to adhere to COVID-19 restrictions compared to an exclusive solidarity appeal among minority group members. These findings suggest that appeals to national solidarity in response to COVID-19 will be most successful when they reference the diversity of the nation.
团结事项:原型性以及少数和多数人遵守国家COVID-19健康建议
为尽量减少冠状病毒-2 (SARS-CoV-2或COVID-19)传播而采取的措施的有效性取决于所有社会成员的遵守情况。爱尔兰对2019冠状病毒病的应对被定义为集体努力,促进了民族团结。然而,国家社会的主导代表往往不经反射地重申多数群体成员的原型性,含蓄地将少数群体成员边缘化。这可能对依从性行为有影响。我们建议,国家社区的多数/少数成员可以通过原型性和国家团结来预测是否遵守COVID-19健康建议。在研究1中,我们在爱尔兰应对的第一波限制期间在线收集了爱尔兰居民(N = 1185)的数据。在研究2中,我们收集了第二波限制期间爱尔兰居民(N = 537)的数据,对少数群体进行了更有针对性的抽样。基于这两项研究,少数群体和多数群体成员的依从性行为没有差异。然而,中介分析表明,当群体成员认为自己是爱尔兰民族社区的典型时,就会更坚持COVID-19健康建议,从而表现出更大的民族团结。在研究3中,我们操纵了遵守限制的呼吁(N = 689),并表明与少数群体成员的排他性团结呼吁相比,包容性团结呼吁增加了遵守COVID-19限制的意向。这些研究结果表明,在涉及国家多样性的情况下,呼吁全国团结一致应对COVID-19将是最成功的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Review of Social Psychology (IRSP) is supported by the Association pour la Diffusion de la Recherche Internationale en Psychologie Sociale (A.D.R.I.P.S.). The International Review of Social Psychology publishes empirical research and theoretical notes in all areas of social psychology. Articles are written preferably in English but can also be written in French. The journal was created to reflect research advances in a field where theoretical and fundamental questions inevitably convey social significance and implications. It emphasizes scientific quality of its publications in every area of social psychology. Any kind of research can be considered, as long as the results significantly enhance the understanding of a general social psychological phenomenon and the methodology is appropriate.
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