Protesting to challenge or defend the system? A system justification perspective on collective action

Autor(en): Osborne, Danny
Jost, John T.
Becker, Julia C.
Badaan, Vivienne
Sibley, Chris G.
Stichwörter: collective action; EFFICACY; GROUP IDENTIFICATION; GROUP MEMBERS; INEQUALITY; multi-group SEM; NEW-ZEALAND; POLITICAL-IDEOLOGY; Psychology; Psychology, Social; RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION; RELATIVE DEPRIVATION; social change; social identity; SOCIAL IDENTITY MODEL; SUPPORT; system justification theory
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Herausgeber: WILEY
Journal: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volumen: 49
Ausgabe: 2
Startseite: 244
Seitenende: 269
Zusammenfassung: 
Social identity, shared grievances, and group efficacy beliefs are well-known antecedents to collective action, but existing research overlooks the fact that collective action often involves a confrontation between those who are motivated to defend the status quo and those who seek to challenge it. Using nationally representative data from New Zealand (Study 1; N = 16,147) and a large online sample from the United States (Study 2; N = 1,513), we address this oversight and demonstrate that system justification is negatively associated with system-challenging collective action, but positively associated with system-supporting collective action, for members of both low-status and high-status groups. Group identification, group-based injustice, group-based anger, and system-based dissatisfaction/anger mediated these relationships. These findings constitute the first empirical integration of system justification theory into a model of collective action that explains when people will act collectively to challenge-and, just as importantly, defend-the status quo.
ISSN: 00462772
DOI: 10.1002/ejsp.2522

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