School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
Br J Soc Psychol. 2024 Jan;63(1):131-152. doi: 10.1111/bjso.12670. Epub 2023 Aug 3.
Advantaged group allies can incur costs or rewards as a result of their allyship. The present work investigates whether such costs and rewards affect how marginalised group members perceive these allies. Across four experiments that collectively examine marginalised group members' perceptions of individual and corporate allies in the context of allyship for women's rights, Black Lives Matter and the LGBTQI+ community, we find that allies are perceived differently as a function of the costs and rewards associated with their allyship. Allies who face costs are perceived more positively in terms of tenacity and genuine motivations, and are generally evaluated more favourably compared to allies who do not face costs and those who, instead, garner rewards for their allyship. These findings demonstrate that marginalised group members are cognisant of the costs and rewards allies may reap, and that this information can shape their judgements of allies' investment in the cause.
优势群体的盟友可能会因为他们的盟友关系而付出代价或获得回报。本研究旨在探讨这些代价和回报是否会影响边缘化群体成员对这些盟友的看法。通过四项实验,我们共同考察了在女性权利、“黑人的命也是命”和 LGBTQI+ 群体的盟友关系背景下,边缘化群体成员对个人和企业盟友的看法,结果发现,盟友的形象会因为他们的盟友关系所带来的代价和回报而有所不同。那些付出代价的盟友在坚韧和真诚动机方面的评价更高,与那些没有付出代价的盟友以及那些因为盟友关系而获得回报的盟友相比,通常会得到更有利的评价。这些发现表明,边缘化群体成员意识到盟友可能获得的代价和回报,而这些信息可以影响他们对盟友为事业投入的判断。