The more, the merrier? Numerical strength versus subgroup distinctiveness in minority groups
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Evidence attests to the efforts made by minority groups to defend and promote ‘distinctive’ attributes that potentially define the ingroup. However, these attributes are often only available to a prototypical minority within the minority category. In two studies we tested the hypothesis that, under certain conditions, large projected increases in the numerical strength of a ‘distinctive’ attribute (emotional intelligence in Study 1; ingroup language in Study 2) within a minority category can paradoxically evoke less-than-positive reactions from those who already have the attribute. Findings confirmed that while a large projected increase in the numerical strength of a ‘distinctive’ attribute was viewed positively when the comparative context focused on the inter-category relation with a majority outgroup, this increase was viewed less positively, and as undermining their own identity, in a narrower intra-category context. Implications for identity management strategies in minority groups are discussed.
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LIVINGSTONE, Andrew G., Russell SPEARS, Antony S. R. MANSTEAD, Martin BRUDER, 2011. The more, the merrier? Numerical strength versus subgroup distinctiveness in minority groups. In: Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 2011, 47(4), pp. 786-793. ISSN 0022-1031. Available under: doi: 10.1016/j.jesp.2011.03.012BibTex
@article{Livingstone2011merri-12837, year={2011}, doi={10.1016/j.jesp.2011.03.012}, title={The more, the merrier? Numerical strength versus subgroup distinctiveness in minority groups}, number={4}, volume={47}, issn={0022-1031}, journal={Journal of Experimental Social Psychology}, pages={786--793}, author={Livingstone, Andrew G. and Spears, Russell and Manstead, Antony S. R. and Bruder, Martin} }
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