School of Psychology, St Andrews University, UK.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2012 Mar;51(1):72-92. doi: 10.1111/j.2044-8309.2010.02001.x. Epub 2011 Feb 5.
The present article reports a longitudinal study of the psychological antecedents for, and outcomes of, collective action for a community sample of activists. At Time 1, activist identification influenced intentions to engage in collective action behaviours protesting the Iraq war, both directly and indirectly via perceptions of the efficacy of these behaviours for achieving group goals, as well as perceptions of individual-level benefits. At Time 2, identification was associated with differences in the dimensions on which the movement's success was evaluated. In the context of the movement's failure to achieve its stated objectives of troop withdrawal, those with strong activist identity placed less importance on influencing government decision making. The implications are discussed in terms of models of collective action and social identity, focusing on a dynamic model that relates identification with a group to evaluations of instrumentality at a group and individual level; and to beliefs about strategic responses to achieve group goals.
本文报告了一项针对社区活动家样本的集体行动的心理前因及其结果的纵向研究。在时间 1 点,活动家认同通过对这些行为对实现群体目标的功效以及对个人层面收益的看法,直接和间接地影响了参与抗议伊拉克战争的集体行动行为的意图。在时间 2 点,认同与运动成功的评价维度有关。在运动未能实现其撤军的既定目标的情况下,那些具有强烈活动家认同的人对影响政府决策的重要性降低。本文从集体行动和社会认同的模型的角度探讨了这些结果,重点讨论了一种将认同与群体联系起来的动态模型,以及与群体和个人层面的工具性评估以及实现群体目标的战略反应信念有关的模型。