Knapton Holly, Renström Emma, Lindén Magnus
Department of Psychology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Psychology, Kristianstad University, Kristianstad, Sweden.
Front Psychol. 2022 Nov 30;13:1025928. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1025928. eCollection 2022.
Recently, the abortion issue has entered the spotlight in the USA, leading to potential radical actions. As the majority opinion on the abortion issue vary with state, some individuals will be in the numerical minority within their state, possibly evoking feelings of exclusion. Social exclusion can motivate a radicalization process. The aim of this paper is to explore how individuals in a numerical minority experience feelings of exclusion and significance loss and how this may drive radicalization in the context of the abortion issue.
A quasi-experimental design was used and 534 respondents from naturally occurring numerical minority and majority groups based on state abortion opinion participated in an online survey.
Results showed that those in the numerical minority experienced exclusion and were more willing to engage in and endorse radical actions compared to those in the majority, regardless of position on the abortion issue. Serial mediation analysis revealed that the pathway between minority group status and engagement and endorsement of extreme actions was fully mediated by need-threat and ingroup identity.
Being in the numerical minority is associated with feelings of social exclusion, which may trigger a radicalization process. The results advance our understanding of when and who is vulnerable to radicalization and that social structures that perpetuate marginalization and inequality may contribute to radicalization. Results highlight the need to continue to explore radicalization from a group-based perspective and emphasize exploring mediating factors as a pathway from social experiences to willingness to engage with radical groups.
最近,堕胎问题在美国成为焦点,引发了潜在的激进行动。由于堕胎问题上的多数意见因州而异,一些人在本州可能属于少数派,这可能会引发被排斥感。社会排斥会促使激进化过程。本文旨在探讨少数派个体如何体验被排斥感和意义丧失感,以及在堕胎问题背景下这可能如何推动激进化。
采用准实验设计,534名基于州堕胎意见来自自然形成的少数派和多数派群体的受访者参与了一项在线调查。
结果显示,无论在堕胎问题上的立场如何,少数派个体都体验到了被排斥感,并且比多数派个体更愿意参与并支持激进行动。系列中介分析表明,少数群体地位与参与和支持极端行动之间的路径完全由需求威胁和群体认同介导。
处于少数派与社会排斥感相关,这可能引发激进化过程。这些结果推进了我们对何时以及谁容易激进化的理解,并且使边缘化和不平等长期存在的社会结构可能导致激进化。结果强调需要继续从群体角度探索激进化,并强调探索中介因素作为从社会经历到参与激进群体意愿的一条途径。