Social resistance is defined as a group's opposition to economic, political, and social circumstances that perpetuate social disadvantage, or differences within society. Social identity researchers (SIT), amongst others, have theorizes about the psychological process underlying social resistance. Social identity is that of an individual's identity derived from their membership of groups, be they chosen, such as sport-team supporters, or acquired, such as gender of ethnicity. SIT outlines various social resistance strategies, ranging from indirect to the more direct, in response to threats to social identity. However, SIT typically conceptualizes identity threats primarily in terms to group value. In this chapter we argue that to conceptuali...
This paper contributes to a debate which questions whether employees have the means and the motivati...
We examined (N = 76) how social creativity strategies such as intergroup differentiation and intragr...
We propose that reactance to threats to individual freedom can be broadened to include threats to gr...
Social resistance is defined as a group's opposition to economic, political, and social circumstance...
The present research tested the proposition that the sense of self-continuity that people derive fro...
need to belong, obtaining material resources) that are themselves influenced by cognitive processes ...
Social identity processes play a crucial role in the dynamics of protest, whether as antecedents, me...
In two studies (Ns=163, 164), the authors tested the prediction that perceptions of group variabilit...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
In this chapter, we examine the self and identity by considering the different conditions under whic...
How do individuals deal with group disadvantage when their fellow in-group members conceive it as le...
As conflict has at its basis a contest of ideas, values or resources between two or more groups, a c...
Compensatory control theory proposes that individuals can assuage threatened personal control by end...
Topics discussed in this chapter include the following: generalizability of stereotype threat effect...
This paper contributes to a debate which questions whether employees have the means and the motivati...
We examined (N = 76) how social creativity strategies such as intergroup differentiation and intragr...
We propose that reactance to threats to individual freedom can be broadened to include threats to gr...
Social resistance is defined as a group's opposition to economic, political, and social circumstance...
The present research tested the proposition that the sense of self-continuity that people derive fro...
need to belong, obtaining material resources) that are themselves influenced by cognitive processes ...
Social identity processes play a crucial role in the dynamics of protest, whether as antecedents, me...
In two studies (Ns=163, 164), the authors tested the prediction that perceptions of group variabilit...
According to social identity theory people derive part of their identity—their social identity—from ...
In this chapter, we examine the self and identity by considering the different conditions under whic...
How do individuals deal with group disadvantage when their fellow in-group members conceive it as le...
As conflict has at its basis a contest of ideas, values or resources between two or more groups, a c...
Compensatory control theory proposes that individuals can assuage threatened personal control by end...
Topics discussed in this chapter include the following: generalizability of stereotype threat effect...
This paper contributes to a debate which questions whether employees have the means and the motivati...
We examined (N = 76) how social creativity strategies such as intergroup differentiation and intragr...
We propose that reactance to threats to individual freedom can be broadened to include threats to gr...