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14 Intergroup Relations

14 Intergroup Relations. As a social species, humans strive to establish close ties with one another. Yet the same species that seeks out connections with others also metes out enmity when it confronts members of another group. Intergroup relations are more often contentious than harmonious.

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14 Intergroup Relations

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  1. 14Intergroup Relations As a social species, humans strive to establish close ties with one another. Yet the same species that seeks out connections with others also metes out enmity when it confronts members of another group. Intergroup relations are more often contentious than harmonious. • What interpersonal factors disrupt relations between groups? • What are the psychological foundations of conflict between groups? • How can intergroup relations be improved?

  2. Intergroup Relations I am, in plainer words, a bundle of prejudices—made up of likings and dislikings—the veriest thrall of sympathies, apathies, and antipathies." - Nineteenth century English author Charles Lamb I have no race prejudices, and I think I have no color prejudices nor creed prejudices. Indeed, I know it. I can stand any society.” -- Mark Twain • Does membership in one group require rejection of other groups? • Who does more harm? Groups or individuals? • Is it hopeless? Can conflict only be reduced if all groups are blended together?

  3. Causes What Interpersonal Factors Disrupt Relations Between Groups? • The Robbers Cave Experiment • Conducted by Muzafer and Carolyn Sherif and colleagues in 1950s • Two groups of young boys: The Rattlers and the Eagles

  4. Scenes from the Robbers Cave

  5. Conflict at the Robbers Cave • Result: Reactions to conflict escalated from exclusion to verbal abuse to discrimination to violence • What caused the conflict between these two groups?

  6. Competition for Scarce Resources • Competition Realistic Group Conflict Theory Realistic group conflict theory assumes that conflict occurs because groups must compete with one another for scarce resources. Blake and Mouton documented the effects of anticipated competition on conflict.

  7. People in groups are ultra-competitive • The Discontinuity Effect Insko and his colleagues find groups are more competitive than individuals • Greed • Identifiability • Fear • Diffusion of Responsibility

  8. Maier & Hinsz (2004) “Hot Sauce” Study In a purported taste test study participants (alone or in a group) were told another person or a group had sent them a cup of very, very spicy sauce to consume (48.1 grams). They then were asked to measure out a portion to send to that other individual or group.

  9. Power: Group vs. Group • Power and Domination • Social Dominance Theory (Sidanius & Pratto) Economic versus militaristic (coercive) exploitation Insko’s study of laboratory microsocieties If certain groups of people stayed in their place, we would have fewer problems. Sometimes other groups must be kept in their place We should do what we can to equalize conditions for groups. We should increase social equality.

  10. The emotional mechanisms described by the frustration aggression hypothesis and the general aggression model can trigger impulsive intergroup aggression. Spiral of negative intergroup hostility • Intergroup Aggression Aversive situational circumstances (pain, loss of resources, failure) Arousal paired with negative thoughts and emotions Aggression Group A Aversive situational circumstances (pain, loss of resources, failure) Arousal paired with negative thoughts and emotions Group B Aggression

  11. Scapegoat Processes • Intergroup Aggression Aversive situational circumstances (pain, loss of resources, failure) Arousal paired with negative thoughts and emotions Aggression Group A Aversive situational circumstances (pain, loss of resources, failure) Arousal paired with negative thoughts and emotions Group B Aggression Group C

  12. Norms of Engagement

  13. Evolutionary Perspectives

  14. Causes • Intergroup Bias • Resolution • Categorization • Ingroup-outgroup bias • Tajfel and Turner’s “minimal intergroup situation” • Groups were nominal, based on some trivial factor (such as art preferences) • When asked to distribute resources to others, favored the members of one’s own group • They concluded (1986, p. 13): the “mere perception of belonging to two distinct groups—that is, social categorization per se—is sufficient to trigger intergroup discrimination favoring the ingroup” • Cognitive biases • Stereotype content model • Exclusion & dehumanization • Categorization & identity

  15. Ingroup Outgroup • Ingroup-outgroup bias

  16. Cognitive Biases

  17. Stereotype content model:outgroup viewed in terms of warmth and competence • Stereotype content model Emotions: Pity, contempt, envy, admiration Cuddy, Fiske, & Glick, 2007

  18. Exclusion & dehumanization

  19. Categorization & identity Not clear if outgroup rejection raises self-esteem

  20. Conflict Resolution How can intergroup conflict be minimized? • Intergroup contact • Cognitive cures • Learning to cooperate Contact between the groups at the Robbers Cave did not reduce hostilities

  21. Beyond the “basic” ingredients: Empirical findings • Intergroup contact

  22. Beyond the “basic” ingredients: Empirical findings • Intergroup contact

  23. Intergroup contact Pettigrew and Tropp's review High quality contact is best, but any contact better than nothing Contact is more effective in recreational, laboratory, work and educational settings than in residential and tourist settings.

  24. Cognitive cures

  25. Learning to cooperate

  26. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction....The chain reaction of evil--hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars--must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation. Martin Luther King, Jr.

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