We examined (structurally advantaged) non-Aborigines' willingness for political action against government redress to (structurally disadvantaged) Aborigines in Australia. We found non-Aborigines opposed to government redress to be high in symbolic racism and to perceive their ingroup as deprived relative to Aborigines. However, only perceived relative deprivation was associated with feelings of group-based anger. In addition, consistent with relative deprivation and emotion theory, it was group-based anger that fully mediated a willingness for political action against government redress. Thus, the specific group-based emotion of anger explained why symbolic racism and relative deprivation promoted a willingness for political action against ...
Abstract A wealth of evidence has demonstrated that individuals’ participation in collective actio...
This study examines how economic prosperity differentially influences support for anti-immigrant sen...
Ideologies that legitimise status hierarchies are associated with increased wellbeing. However, whic...
We examined (structurally advantaged) non-Aborigines' willingness for political action against gover...
We examined (structurally advantaged) non-Aborigines' willingness for political action against gover...
Three studies examined non-Aboriginal Australians’ guilt and anger about their ingroup’s advantage o...
Three studies examined non-Aboriginal Australians’ guilt and anger about their ingroup’s advantage o...
In this paper, we investigate majority-culture attitudes to multicultural policy in Australia. Drawi...
In this paper, we investigate majority-culture attitudes to multicultural policy in Australia. Drawi...
Two explanations for collective behavior were contrasted. The first, exemplified by relative depriva...
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media New York The focus of this special issue is relative deprivat...
This experiment examined the hypotheses that both collective relative deprivation (CRD) and perceive...
Egalitarianism is highly valued in Canada and yet some groups are profoundly disadvantaged. This ca...
The focus of this special issue is relative deprivation (RD): the judgment that one or one’s group i...
The focus of this special issue is relative deprivation (RD): the judgment that one or one’s group i...
Abstract A wealth of evidence has demonstrated that individuals’ participation in collective actio...
This study examines how economic prosperity differentially influences support for anti-immigrant sen...
Ideologies that legitimise status hierarchies are associated with increased wellbeing. However, whic...
We examined (structurally advantaged) non-Aborigines' willingness for political action against gover...
We examined (structurally advantaged) non-Aborigines' willingness for political action against gover...
Three studies examined non-Aboriginal Australians’ guilt and anger about their ingroup’s advantage o...
Three studies examined non-Aboriginal Australians’ guilt and anger about their ingroup’s advantage o...
In this paper, we investigate majority-culture attitudes to multicultural policy in Australia. Drawi...
In this paper, we investigate majority-culture attitudes to multicultural policy in Australia. Drawi...
Two explanations for collective behavior were contrasted. The first, exemplified by relative depriva...
© 2015 Springer Science+Business Media New York The focus of this special issue is relative deprivat...
This experiment examined the hypotheses that both collective relative deprivation (CRD) and perceive...
Egalitarianism is highly valued in Canada and yet some groups are profoundly disadvantaged. This ca...
The focus of this special issue is relative deprivation (RD): the judgment that one or one’s group i...
The focus of this special issue is relative deprivation (RD): the judgment that one or one’s group i...
Abstract A wealth of evidence has demonstrated that individuals’ participation in collective actio...
This study examines how economic prosperity differentially influences support for anti-immigrant sen...
Ideologies that legitimise status hierarchies are associated with increased wellbeing. However, whic...