Put your money where your mouth is! Explaining collective action tendencies through group-based anger and group efficacy.
about
Digital Social Norm Enforcement: Online Firestorms in Social MediaCollective futures: how projections about the future of society are related to actions and attitudes supporting social change.Climate Justice: High-Status Ingroup Social Models Increase Pro-Environmental Action Through Making Actions Seem More Moral.Affective dimensions of intergroup humiliation.The day after an electoral defeat: counterfactuals and collective action.On conviction's collective consequences: integrating moral conviction with the social identity model of collective action.Seeing Red: Anger Increases How Much Republican Identification Predicts Partisan Attitudes and Perceived Polarization.Collective Efficacy in Sports and Physical Activities: Perceived Emotional Synchrony and Shared FlowFear and Anger in Great Britain: Blame Assignment and Emotional Reactions to the Financial Crisis'This will bring shame on our nation': The role of anticipated group-based emotions on collective action.Admiration regulates social hierarchy: Antecedents, dispositions, and effects on intergroup behaviorAuthority Relationship From a Societal Perspective: Social Representations of Obedience and Disobedience in Austrian Young Adults.Social identity performance: extending the strategic side of SIDE.The political solidarity model of social change: dynamics of self-categorization in intergroup power relations.American Muslims' Anger and Sadness about In-group Social Image.Protesters as "passionate economists": a dynamic dual pathway model of approach coping with collective disadvantage.Collective resistance despite complicity: High identifiers rise above the legitimization of disadvantage by the in-group.Emotional collectives: How groups shape emotions and emotions shape groups.Perception of emotional climate in a revolution: Test of a multistage theory of revolution in the Tunisian context.How risk perception shapes collective action intentions in repressive contexts: A study of Egyptian activists during the 2013 post-coup uprising.The Process Model of Group-Based Emotion: Integrating Intergroup Emotion and Emotion Regulation Perspectives.Where There Is a (Collective) Will, There Are (Effective) Ways: Integrating Individual- and Group-Level Factors in Explaining Humanitarian Collective Action.When will collective action be effective? Violent and non-violent protests differentially influence perceptions of legitimacy and efficacy among sympathizers.Emotional reactions to success and failure of collective action as predictors of future action intentions: a longitudinal investigation in the context of student protests in Germany.Emotional consequences of collective action participation: differentiating self-directed and outgroup-directed emotions.Social identity change in response to discrimination.Perceived Prejudice and the Mental Health of Chinese Ethnic Minority College Students: The Chain Mediating Effect of Ethnic Identity and Hope.Theory of EmotionsFriend or ally: whether cross-group contact undermines collective action depends on what advantaged group members say (or don't say).Why did Italians protest against Berlusconi's sexist behaviour? The role of sexist beliefs and emotional reactions in explaining women and men's pathways to protest.Coping with the 10th anniversary of 9/11: Muslim Americans' sadness, fear, and anger.Angry opposition to government redress: when the structurally advantaged perceive themselves as relatively deprived.More than a feeling: discrete emotions mediate the relationship between relative deprivation and reactions to workplace furloughs.Anger and guilt about ingroup advantage explain the willingness for political action.Specific emotions as mediators of the effect of intergroup contact on prejudice: findings across multiple participant and target groups.The liberal illusion of uniqueness.Yes we can!: prejudice reduction through seeing (inequality) and believing (in social change).Committed dis(s)idents: participation in radical collective action fosters disidentification with the broader in-group but enhances political identification.Social change as an important goal or likely outcome: how regulatory focus affects commitment to collective action.The moral dimension of politicized identity: Exploring identity content during the 2012 Presidential Elections in the USA.
P2860
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P2860
Put your money where your mouth is! Explaining collective action tendencies through group-based anger and group efficacy.
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2004年の論文
@ja
2004年学术文章
@wuu
2004年学术文章
@zh
2004年学术文章
@zh-cn
2004年学术文章
@zh-hans
2004年学术文章
@zh-my
2004年学术文章
@zh-sg
2004年學術文章
@yue
2004年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@en
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@nl
type
label
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@en
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@nl
prefLabel
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@en
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@nl
P2093
P1476
Put your money where your mout ...... ased anger and group efficacy.
@en
P2093
Agneta H Fischer
Colin Wayne Leach
Martijn van Zomeren
Russell Spears
P304
P356
10.1037/0022-3514.87.5.649
P577
2004-11-01T00:00:00Z