Reicher Stephen, Haslam S Alexander
School of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, Fife, UK.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2006 Mar;45(Pt 1):1-40; discussion 47-53. doi: 10.1348/014466605X48998.
This paper presents findings from the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) prison study - an experimental case study that examined the consequences of randomly dividing men into groups of prisoners and guards within a specially constructed institution over a period of 8 days. Unlike the prisoners, the guards failed to identify with their role. This made the guards reluctant to impose their authority and they were eventually overcome by the prisoners. Participants then established an egalitarian social system. When this proved unsustainable, moves to impose a tyrannical regime met with weakening resistance. Empirical and theoretical analysis addresses the conditions under which people identify with the groups to which they are assigned and the social, organizational, and clinical consequences of either doing so or failing to do so. On the basis of these findings, a new framework for understanding tyranny is outlined. This suggests that it is powerlessness and the failure of groups that makes tyranny psychologically acceptable.
本文介绍了英国广播公司(BBC)监狱研究的结果——一项实验性案例研究,该研究在一个专门建造的机构内,对男性进行了为期8天的随机分组,分为囚犯组和警卫组,并考察了由此产生的后果。与囚犯不同,警卫未能认同自己的角色。这使得警卫不愿行使权力,最终被囚犯制服。参与者随后建立了一个平等主义的社会制度。当事实证明这种制度无法维持时,实施专制政权的举措遇到的阻力逐渐减弱。实证和理论分析探讨了人们认同自己被分配到的群体的条件,以及认同或不认同所带来的社会、组织和临床后果。基于这些发现,概述了一个理解暴政的新框架。这表明,是无力感和群体的失败使得暴政在心理上可以被接受。