Department of Psychology, New School for Social Research, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Psychology and Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Nat Hum Behav. 2018 May;2(5):343-347. doi: 10.1038/s41562-018-0334-3. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Nationality governs almost every aspect of our lives, including where we may live and travel, as well as our opportunities for education, healthcare and work. It is a common-sense social category that guides us in making inferences about the social world. Nationalism has been extensively studied within the social and cognitive sciences, but there has been little empirical investigation into folk theories regarding what determines someone's nationality. In experiments carried out in the United States and India (N = 2,745), we used a variant of the switched-at-birth task to investigate the extent to which people believe that nationality is determined by biology or is a malleable social identity that can be acquired. We find that folk theories of nationality seem remarkably flexible. Depending on the framing of the question, people report believing that nationality is either fluid or fixed at birth. Our results demonstrate that people from different cultures with different experiences of migration and different explicit stereotypes of their own nation may share similar folk theories about nationality. Moreover, these theories may shape attitudes towards immigrants-an important public-policy issue. Belief that nationality is malleable is associated with more positive attitudes towards immigrants even when holding ideology constant.
国籍几乎统治着我们生活的方方面面,包括我们可能居住和旅行的地方,以及我们接受教育、医疗和工作的机会。它是一种常见的社会类别,指导着我们对社会世界进行推断。民族主义在社会和认知科学领域已经得到了广泛的研究,但对于决定一个人国籍的因素,人们的民族理论很少有实证研究。我们在美国和印度进行的实验(N=2745)中,使用了一种变体的出生交换任务来调查人们认为国籍是由生物学决定的,还是一种可以后天获得的可塑的社会身份。我们发现,民族理论似乎非常灵活。根据问题的表述,人们报告说他们相信国籍要么是流动的,要么是在出生时就固定的。我们的结果表明,来自不同文化、有着不同移民经历和对自己国家不同明确刻板印象的人,可能对国籍有相似的民族理论。此外,这些理论可能会影响人们对移民的态度,这是一个重要的公共政策问题。认为国籍是可塑的与对移民的更积极态度相关,即使在保持意识形态不变的情况下也是如此。