Department of Applied Psychology, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development, New York University, New York, USA.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2020 Jan;59(1):227-247. doi: 10.1111/bjso.12335. Epub 2019 Jun 10.
Donald J. Trump's 2016 presidential election victory spurred strong reactions and unprecedented collective action in the American Left. Taking advantage of the political climate in the wake of the election, this study examined whether the main antecedents of collective action (anger, political identification, and efficacy beliefs) in the immediate aftermath of the election loss for the American Left predicted varying types of collective action and social movement identification one month into Trump's presidency, and whether these factors in turn fuel anger and influence efficacy beliefs. Data collected from 913 self-identified liberal Clinton supporters at two time points (respectively, 7-10 days following the election and one month into Trump's presidency) revealed that political identification, anger, and efficacy to oppose Trump at Time 1 predicted engagement in collective action during the first month of Trump's presidency as well as higher identification with the emerging movement. While efficacy to oppose Trump predicted higher social movement identification, efficacy to change hearts and minds predicted lower social movement identification. We also examined the iterative processes of collective action, showing that the anger route was more central to galvanizing collective action than the efficacy route. These findings extend collective action research to contexts of emerging social movements following electoral processes.
唐纳德·J·特朗普(Donald J. Trump)在 2016 年总统大选中获胜,引发了美国左派的强烈反应和前所未有的集体行动。本研究利用选举后的政治氛围,考察了美国左派在选举失利后的主要集体行动前因(愤怒、政治认同和效能信念)是否预测了特朗普执政一个月后不同类型的集体行动和社会运动认同,以及这些因素是否反过来加剧了愤怒并影响了效能信念。本研究在两个时间点(分别是选举后 7-10 天和特朗普执政一个月后)从 913 名自认为是自由派的克林顿支持者那里收集了数据,结果表明,第一时间的政治认同、愤怒和反对特朗普的效能预测了特朗普执政第一个月的集体行动参与度,以及更高的运动认同。虽然反对特朗普的效能预测了更高的社会运动认同,但改变心态的效能预测了更低的社会运动认同。我们还考察了集体行动的迭代过程,结果表明,愤怒的途径比效能的途径更能激发集体行动。这些发现将集体行动研究扩展到选举过程后新兴社会运动的背景中。