Refusing intergroup help from the morally superior: How one group's moral superiority leads to another group's reluctance to seek their help

Susanne Täuber, Martijn van Zomeren

Onderzoeksoutput: ArticleAcademicpeer review

31 Citaten (Scopus)
675 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

We examine how group members paradoxically refuse intergroup help where they might need it most: in the moral status domain. Based on the Sacred Value Protection Model (Tetlock, 2002), we predicted and found that group members felt stronger group-based anger and a stronger motivation to reaffirm their group's moral status when an outgroup was morally superior to them. Despite this moral motivation, however, we also predicted and found that group members more strongly refused intergroup help to improve their moral status vis-à-vis the morally superior outgroup (compared to an uninvolved outgroup). Consistent with the Social Identity model of Deindividuation Effects (Reicher, Spears, & Postmes, 1995), group members thus strategically refused intergroup help to defend their group identity. Supporting this interpretation, particularly
highly identified group members were most likely to refuse intergroup help when they needed it most. We discuss theoretical and practical implications of our findings.
Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)420-423
Aantal pagina's4
TijdschriftJournal of Experimental Social Psychology
Volume48
Nummer van het tijdschrift1
Vroegere onlinedatum28-aug.-2011
DOI's
StatusPublished - jan.-2012

Vingerafdruk

Duik in de onderzoeksthema's van 'Refusing intergroup help from the morally superior: How one group's moral superiority leads to another group's reluctance to seek their help'. Samen vormen ze een unieke vingerafdruk.

Citeer dit