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2024 (English)In: Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, ISSN 1368-4302, E-ISSN 1461-7188, Vol. 27, no 2, p. 217-238Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Collective action is often equated with progressive politics, but are there aspects of group mobilisations that generalise across contexts? We examine general social and personality psychological factors behind endorsement of group-based violence across different types of violent group mobilisation. Specifically, we focus on the endorsement of group-based violence amongst supporters of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement (N = 394), an immigration-critical group (N = 252), and soccer supporters (N = 445). Across three preregistered studies, we tested an integrative model including personality and social psychological factors. Several effects were consistent across all three contexts, with group-based relative deprivation positively, and honesty-humility negatively, predicting support for violence. Further, amongst BLM supporters and the immigration-critical group, emotionality negatively predicted support for violence, violent intentions, and self-reported aggression/violence. Overall, our results suggest that individuals who endorse violence in different contexts have some psychological factors in common.
Keywords
collective action, group-based violence, social factors, personality, Black Lives Matter
National Category
Psychology
Research subject
Psychology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-215588 (URN)10.1177/13684302231154412 (DOI)000937537200001 ()2-s2.0-85148353388 (Scopus ID)
Funder
Lars Hierta Memorial Foundation, FO2019-0005
Note
The research was supported by grants from Lars Hiertas Memorial Foundation (FO2019-0005) and Elisabeth and Herman Rhodin Memorial Foundation to Joanna Lindström (SU FV-2.1.9-0174-19) and a grant to Robin Bergh from Marcus and Marianne Wallenberg Foundation (ref no MMW 2016.0070).
2023-03-202023-03-202024-02-20Bibliographically approved