The default ideological position is status quo maintaining, and challenging the status quo is associated with increased efforts and risks. Nonetheless, some people choose to challenge the status quo. Therefore, to challenge the status quo should imply a strong belief in one’s position as the correct one, and thus efforts may be undertaken to undermine the position of others. Study 1 (N = 311) showed that challengers undermined, by ascribing more externality and less rationality, the position of defenders to a larger extent than defenders did of challengers’ position. Studies 2 (N = 135) and 3 (N = 109) tested if these effects were driven by the implied minority status of the challenging position. Results revealed no effects of experimentall...
Using a social identity perspective, two experiments examined the effects of power and the legitimac...
This experiment examined how structural characteristics of an intergroup relationship influence the ...
Past research indicates that in political debates the same arguments are judged very differently dep...
The default ideological position is status quo maintaining, and challenging the status quo is associ...
People want to maintain status quo. Most prior research concern groups with real status differences....
It was hypothesized that relative group status and endorsement of ideologies that legitimize group s...
The current study examines perceived status differences among ethnic groups. Consistent with a group...
Research suggests that (a) people conform more with members of their own social groups than with mem...
Two experiments were conducted to assess the impact of status differentials on subgroup attitudes an...
People tend to derogate their ideological opponents. But how does social status affect this tendency...
International audienceConsistent with the theory of malleable ideology, research has shown that, und...
Status and power covary such that higher status groups are typically higher power gro...
Using a social identity perspective, two experiments examined the effects of power and the legitimac...
It was hypothesized that relative group status and endorsement of ideologies that legitimize group s...
Against the backdrop of significant social and political change in the US, dominant groups’ percepti...
Using a social identity perspective, two experiments examined the effects of power and the legitimac...
This experiment examined how structural characteristics of an intergroup relationship influence the ...
Past research indicates that in political debates the same arguments are judged very differently dep...
The default ideological position is status quo maintaining, and challenging the status quo is associ...
People want to maintain status quo. Most prior research concern groups with real status differences....
It was hypothesized that relative group status and endorsement of ideologies that legitimize group s...
The current study examines perceived status differences among ethnic groups. Consistent with a group...
Research suggests that (a) people conform more with members of their own social groups than with mem...
Two experiments were conducted to assess the impact of status differentials on subgroup attitudes an...
People tend to derogate their ideological opponents. But how does social status affect this tendency...
International audienceConsistent with the theory of malleable ideology, research has shown that, und...
Status and power covary such that higher status groups are typically higher power gro...
Using a social identity perspective, two experiments examined the effects of power and the legitimac...
It was hypothesized that relative group status and endorsement of ideologies that legitimize group s...
Against the backdrop of significant social and political change in the US, dominant groups’ percepti...
Using a social identity perspective, two experiments examined the effects of power and the legitimac...
This experiment examined how structural characteristics of an intergroup relationship influence the ...
Past research indicates that in political debates the same arguments are judged very differently dep...