Ana Leal, Martijn van Zomeren, Roberto González, Ernestine Gordijn, Pia Carozzi, Michal Reifen-Tagar, Belén Álvarez, Cristián Frigolett, Eran Halperin
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By integrating the moralization and collective action literatures, we hypothesized that participation in collective action moralizes individuals' attitudes over time because it politicizes their identity, enrages them vis-a-vis the outgroup, and/or empowers them to achieve social change. We tested these hypotheses in a 2-year, five-wave longitudinal study (<i>N</i> = 1,214) in the contentious context of the Chilean student movement. We examined within-person (and between-person) changes over time and consistently found that participation in collective action predicted individual changes in moral conviction over time through politicized identification and group-based anger toward the outgroup. Furthermore, moral conviction predicted participation in collective action over time-an effect consistently explained by politicized identification. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
虽然我们对人们参与集体行动的原因(例如,政治化的身份认同,基于群体的愤怒)了解很多,但对这种参与的心理后果知之甚少。例如,参与集体行动是否有助于态度道德化(例如,使他们对该主题的态度道德化)?基于集体行动背景通常涉及强大的社会运动与不道德对手的斗争这一观点,我们提出,随着时间的推移,参与集体行动有助于态度道德化。通过整合道德化和集体行动的文献,我们假设,随着时间的推移,参与集体行动会使个人的态度道德化,因为它使他们的身份政治化,激怒他们面对外部群体,和/或赋予他们实现社会变革的权力。我们在一项为期2年的五波纵向研究(N = 1,214)中检验了这些假设,该研究是在智利学生运动的有争议的背景下进行的。我们研究了个人内部(以及人与人之间)随时间的变化,并一致发现,通过政治化的认同和基于群体的对外部群体的愤怒,参与集体行动预测了个人道德信念随时间的变化。此外,随着时间的推移,道德信念预示着集体行动的参与——这种效应一直被政治化的认同所解释。这些发现首次表明:(a)参与集体行动使个人的态度道德化,因为它使他们的身份政治化,并激怒他们面对(不道德的)外部群体;(b)道德化反过来有助于更好地理解持续的运动参与。讨论了关于道德和集体行动的文献的理论含义。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,版权所有)。
Attitude moralization in the context of collective action: How participation in collective action may foster moralization over time.
Although much is known about why people engage in collective action participation (e.g., politicized identity, group-based anger), little is known about the psychological consequences of such participation. For example, can participation in collective action facilitate attitude moralization (e.g., moralize their attitudes on the topic)? Based on the idea that collective action contexts often involve a strong social movement fighting against an immoral adversary, we propose that participating in collective action facilitates attitude moralization over time. By integrating the moralization and collective action literatures, we hypothesized that participation in collective action moralizes individuals' attitudes over time because it politicizes their identity, enrages them vis-a-vis the outgroup, and/or empowers them to achieve social change. We tested these hypotheses in a 2-year, five-wave longitudinal study (N = 1,214) in the contentious context of the Chilean student movement. We examined within-person (and between-person) changes over time and consistently found that participation in collective action predicted individual changes in moral conviction over time through politicized identification and group-based anger toward the outgroup. Furthermore, moral conviction predicted participation in collective action over time-an effect consistently explained by politicized identification. These findings are the first to show that (a) participation in collective action moralizes individuals' attitudes because it politicizes their identity and enrages them vis-a-vis the (immoral) outgroup and that (b) moralization in turn helps to better understand sustained movement participation. Theoretical implications for the literature on moralization and collective action are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Journal of personality and social psychology publishes original papers in all areas of personality and social psychology and emphasizes empirical reports, but may include specialized theoretical, methodological, and review papers.Journal of personality and social psychology is divided into three independently edited sections. Attitudes and Social Cognition addresses all aspects of psychology (e.g., attitudes, cognition, emotion, motivation) that take place in significant micro- and macrolevel social contexts.