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Angry opposition to government redress: when the structurally advantaged perceive themselves as relatively deprived
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 14:20 authored by Colin W. Leach, Aarti Iyer, Anne PedersenWe 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 government redress to a structurally disadvantaged out-group. Theoretical and political implications are discussed.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
British Journal of Social PsychologyISSN
0144-6665Publisher
British Psychological SocietyExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
46Page range
191-204Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Notes
Publisher's version available at official URL.Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes