intergroup behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

How does hogg and vaughan (2018) define intergroup behaviour

A

behaviour among individuals that is regulated by those individuals awareness of and identification with different social groups.

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2
Q

what is authoritarian personality and how can personality be used to explain inter group behaviour?

A

Adorno, Frenkel-Brusnkwick, Levinson and Sandford (1950) : Freudian perspective on personality, overly disciplinarian parenting = child develops an unconscious hostility towards weaker groups and over-deference to social authority.

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3
Q

How is authoritarian personality measured?

A

Adorno et al (1950) : F scale

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4
Q

What are the criticism of authoritarian personality?

A
  • focuses on the individual and ignores societal influences
  • pettigrew (1958) : personality did not differ between north and south USA despite higher prejudice in south
  • different personalities cannot explain ethnocentrism and the wide-spread societal uniformity in prejudice.
  • cannot explain sudden emergence of prejudice at certain points in history.
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5
Q

How can inter group behaviour be explain in terms of goal related interest?

A

incompatible goals : groups compete for same goal
Concordant goals: only when groups work together can goal be achieved
Realistic conflict theory.

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6
Q

Explain realistic conflict theory

A

Sherif (1966): ethnocentrism originates in real conflicts of interest between groups. Competing groups = hostility and prejudice

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7
Q

Explain the robbers cave study

A

Sherif (1966) : Ps attend a summer camp, Ps divided into two groups, studies has three stages. inter- group relations arose from competing or coinciding goal interest

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8
Q

what are the criticism of sherif robber cave study

A

McLeod (2023) : biased sample, ethical issues
Perry (2014) : inadvertent research influence
turner (1981): difficult to isolate variables responsible for realistic conflict.

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9
Q

Minimal group experiments

A

Tajfel, Billig, Bundy and Flament (1971) : being categorised into a group is sufficient in and of itself for discrimination.
 Assignment to groups based on thin and arbitrary basis
 Group members never interacted
 Group members were anonymous
 Groups were transitory and had no past history or future

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10
Q

what is the social identity theory

A

Tajfel and turner (1986) : group memberships has self- esteem implications. tend to evaluate in groups positively to maintain a positive identity.

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11
Q

How does social identity theory account for the minimum group paradigm?

A

Groups are arbitrary and meaningless, but Ps are members of one or other group. Only way to boost esteem
of in-group (and hence self-image) is to allocate in-group more money/points.

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12
Q

Social identity theory explanation for conflict between high and low status groups

A

Conflict occurs when groups perceive current status quo can be changed
If status quo cannot be changed, low status group members: a) move into the high status group; or b) find
aspects of (low status) in-group that compare favourably with other groups

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13
Q

how do people divide up their social world into groups?

A

process of self- categorisation
Turner ( 1985) : cognition of categorisation, basis unit is the prototype.

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14
Q

what is a prototype

A

‘fuzzy’ representation of the ideal object or group
represents a given group and helps differentiate from other groups. Assimilation and contrast.

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15
Q

depersonalisation

A

categorisation of people into groups de-emphasises individual differences between groups.

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