Global Human Identification and Citizenship: A Review of Psychological Studies

We review psychological research on global human identification and citizenship, Thomas Paine's belief that "The world is my country, and all mankind are my brethren." In turn, we review the theoretical foundations that guided our work, research with measures that preceded our own, an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Political psychology 2019-02, Vol.40 (S1), p.141-171
Hauptverfasser: McFarland, Sam, Hackett, Justin, Hamer, Katarzyna, Katzarska-Miller, Iva, Malsch, Anna, Reese, Gerhard, Reysen, Stephen
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container_end_page 171
container_issue S1
container_start_page 141
container_title Political psychology
container_volume 40
creator McFarland, Sam
Hackett, Justin
Hamer, Katarzyna
Katzarska-Miller, Iva
Malsch, Anna
Reese, Gerhard
Reysen, Stephen
description We review psychological research on global human identification and citizenship, Thomas Paine's belief that "The world is my country, and all mankind are my brethren." In turn, we review the theoretical foundations that guided our work, research with measures that preceded our own, and our own work with our correlated scales. We review its foundations, its effects upon attitudes and behaviors, and how it might be enlarged. Global human identification and citizenship is related negatively to ethnocentrism, authoritarianism, the social dominance orientation, and self-centeredness, but positively to dispositional empathy, openness to experience, and the values of universalism, care, and justice. It is expressed in attitudes and behaviors that support human rights and work to reduce global suffering and inequalities. It is associated with greater global knowledge and with efforts to acquire that knowledge. Childrearing that emphasizes cross-cultural exposure and awareness of others' suffering may promote global human identification and citizenship, as does education that encourages global mindedness. Environments that support global human identification also induce it, as does envisioning it as a moral ideal.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/pops.12572
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Political Science Complete
subjects Attitudes
Authoritarianism
Childrearing practices
Citizenship
Dominance
Empathy
Ethnocentrism
global identification and citizenship
Human rights
humanitarian concerns
Identification
Inequality
Justice
Knowledge
Psychological research
Suffering
Universalism
Values
title Global Human Identification and Citizenship: A Review of Psychological Studies
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