Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts

In (post-)modern, plural societies, consisting of numerous subgroups, mutual respect between groups plays a central role for a constructive social and political life. In this article, we examine whether group members’ perception of being respected by outgroups fosters respect for these outgroups. In...

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Main Authors: Klaus Michael Reininger, Christoph Daniel Schaefer, Steffen Zitzmann, Bernd Simon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2020-09-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jspp.psychopen.eu/index.php/jspp/article/view/1199
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spelling doaj-f76839cc4f8945bbb83cfddb240087992021-06-11T16:20:07ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252020-09-018254255910.5964/jspp.v8i2.1199jspp.v8i2.1199Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political ContextsKlaus Michael Reininger0Christoph Daniel Schaefer1Steffen Zitzmann2Bernd Simon3Tolerance Research Unit Kiel, Institute of Psychology, Kiel University, Kiel, GermanyTolerance Research Unit Kiel, Institute of Psychology, Kiel University, Kiel, GermanyInstitute for Psychology of Learning and Instruction, Kiel University, Kiel, GermanyTolerance Research Unit Kiel, Institute of Psychology, Kiel University, Kiel, GermanyIn (post-)modern, plural societies, consisting of numerous subgroups, mutual respect between groups plays a central role for a constructive social and political life. In this article, we examine whether group members’ perception of being respected by outgroups fosters respect for these outgroups. In Study 1, we employed a panel sample of supporters of the Tea Party movement in the United States (N = 422). In Study 2, we employed a panel sample of members of the LGBTI community in Germany (N = 262). As disapproved target outgroups, we chose in Study 1 homosexuals in the United States, while in Study 2, we chose supporters of the German populist, right-wing political party „Alternative für Deutschland“. Our studies thus constituted a complementary, nearly symmetrical constellation of a liberal group and a conservative political group each. Among Tea Party movement supporters, respect from a disapproved outgroup consistently predicted respect for that outgroup. Among German LGBTI community members, this effect of respect from a disapproved outgroup was found in some of our analyses. For this latter sample, there was furthermore a tendency of societal respect to predict respect for a disapproved outgroup longitudinally. Additionally, we observed for both of our samples that respect from other ingroup members decreased respect for a disapproved outgroup. The dynamics of mutual respect in these two complementary intergroup contexts are discussed as well as the importance of direct intergroup reciprocity and superordinate group membership as routes to mutual respect.https://jspp.psychopen.eu/index.php/jspp/article/view/1199respectequalityreciprocitysuperordinate group membership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Klaus Michael Reininger
Christoph Daniel Schaefer
Steffen Zitzmann
Bernd Simon
spellingShingle Klaus Michael Reininger
Christoph Daniel Schaefer
Steffen Zitzmann
Bernd Simon
Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
respect
equality
reciprocity
superordinate group membership
author_facet Klaus Michael Reininger
Christoph Daniel Schaefer
Steffen Zitzmann
Bernd Simon
author_sort Klaus Michael Reininger
title Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
title_short Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
title_full Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
title_fullStr Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics of Respect: Evidence From Two Different National and Political Contexts
title_sort dynamics of respect: evidence from two different national and political contexts
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2020-09-01
description In (post-)modern, plural societies, consisting of numerous subgroups, mutual respect between groups plays a central role for a constructive social and political life. In this article, we examine whether group members’ perception of being respected by outgroups fosters respect for these outgroups. In Study 1, we employed a panel sample of supporters of the Tea Party movement in the United States (N = 422). In Study 2, we employed a panel sample of members of the LGBTI community in Germany (N = 262). As disapproved target outgroups, we chose in Study 1 homosexuals in the United States, while in Study 2, we chose supporters of the German populist, right-wing political party „Alternative für Deutschland“. Our studies thus constituted a complementary, nearly symmetrical constellation of a liberal group and a conservative political group each. Among Tea Party movement supporters, respect from a disapproved outgroup consistently predicted respect for that outgroup. Among German LGBTI community members, this effect of respect from a disapproved outgroup was found in some of our analyses. For this latter sample, there was furthermore a tendency of societal respect to predict respect for a disapproved outgroup longitudinally. Additionally, we observed for both of our samples that respect from other ingroup members decreased respect for a disapproved outgroup. The dynamics of mutual respect in these two complementary intergroup contexts are discussed as well as the importance of direct intergroup reciprocity and superordinate group membership as routes to mutual respect.
topic respect
equality
reciprocity
superordinate group membership
url https://jspp.psychopen.eu/index.php/jspp/article/view/1199
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AT steffenzitzmann dynamicsofrespectevidencefromtwodifferentnationalandpoliticalcontexts
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