Grumbling, voting, demonstrating, and rioting: ''Rationality'' and decision-making in intergroup conflict


Autoria(s): Louis, W.; Taylor, D.
Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

An individual faced with intergroup conflict chooses A from a vast array of possible actions, ranging from grumbling among ingroup friends to voting and demonstrating to rioting and revolution. The present paper conceptualises these intergroup choices as rationally shaped by perceptions of the benefits and costs associated with the action (expectancy-value processes). However, in presenting a model of agentic normative influence, it is argued that in intergroup contexts group-level costs and benefits play a critical role in individuals' decision-making. In the context of English-French conflict in Quebec, in Canada, four studies provide evidence that group-level costs and benef influence individuals' decision-making in intergro conflict; that the individual level of analysis need mediate the group level of analysis; that group-level co and benefits mediate the relationship between soc identity and intentions to engage in collective action; a that perceptions of outgroup and ingroup norms for inte group behaviours are relatively invariant and predictal related to perceptions of the group- and individual-le, benefits and costs associated with individualistic vers collective actions. By modelling the relationship betwe group norms and group-level costs and benefits, soc psychologists may begin to address the processes th underlie identity-behaviour relationships in collecti action and intergroup conflict.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:97709

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Taylor and Francis

Palavras-Chave #EX #170113 Social and Community Psychology #16 Studies in Human Society
Tipo

Conference Paper