Intergroup RelationsOpen University Press, 1996 - 191 pages Intergroup Relations examines social psychology's unique contribution to our understanding of intergroup relations, examining the whole range of interactions from the level of individual psychological processes to the behaviour of large social groups. |
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Page 53
... seen as homogeneous , there is little motivation to attend to individual individuating information about an outgroup member , or to acquire new information which might serve to correct stereotyped views of that person . Thus the ...
... seen as homogeneous , there is little motivation to attend to individual individuating information about an outgroup member , or to acquire new information which might serve to correct stereotyped views of that person . Thus the ...
Page 54
... seen as a member of the ingroup . People think about the self more frequently when making ingroup judgments than when making outgroup judgments ( Park and Judd 1990 ) . They also assume more similarity between themselves and the ingroup ...
... seen as a member of the ingroup . People think about the self more frequently when making ingroup judgments than when making outgroup judgments ( Park and Judd 1990 ) . They also assume more similarity between themselves and the ingroup ...
Page 93
... seen in terms of assignment of power to determine the outcomes ( fate ) of group members ( Ng 1982a ) . When members of both groups are given allocation choices , the groups have mutual power ( mutual fate control ) . When allocation ...
... seen in terms of assignment of power to determine the outcomes ( fate ) of group members ( Ng 1982a ) . When members of both groups are given allocation choices , the groups have mutual power ( mutual fate control ) . When allocation ...
Table des matières
FROM BASIC PSYCHOLOGICAL PROCESSES | 1 |
WHAT IS JUST | 77 |
INTERGROUP CONTACT COOPERATION | 107 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
action aggression allocation attribution bias attributions biases Brewer CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ category membership Chapter cognitive competition context cooperative Crocker CRUZ The University decision desegregation dilemma dimensions discussed effects emotional ethnic ethnocentric evaluation experimental experiments factors group identity group members group membership group polarization groupthink Hewstone high status groups Hogg hostility identification individuals ingroup and outgroup ingroup bias ingroup favoritism ingroup-outgroup Insko interaction intergroup conflict intergroup contact intergroup discrimination intergroup relations interpersonal Journal of Personality Journal of Social Latino low status groups negative one's outcomes outgroup homogeneity outgroup members participants perceived perceptions Personality and Social perspective positive distinctiveness prejudice prisoner's dilemma processes responses role salient self-esteem social categories social comparison social comparison theory social groups social identity theory social motives Social Psychology sociobiological status differences status differentials stereotypes study of intergroup subgroups superordinate Tajfel target tion Turner University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA