Comparing normative influence from multiple groups: Beyond family, religious ingroup norms predict children’s prejudice towards refugees

•Religious ingroup norms predict children’s intergroup warmth and contact intentions bias.•Family norms predict children’s intergroup warmth and contact intentions bias.•Intergroup anxiety mediates these normative influences.•Social dominance orientation mediates family normative influence only.•Per...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of intercultural relations 2021-03, Vol.81, p.54-67
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Elaine M., Minescu, Anca
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container_title International journal of intercultural relations
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Minescu, Anca
description •Religious ingroup norms predict children’s intergroup warmth and contact intentions bias.•Family norms predict children’s intergroup warmth and contact intentions bias.•Intergroup anxiety mediates these normative influences.•Social dominance orientation mediates family normative influence only.•Perceived threat mediates normative influence on intergroup warmth bias only. In the wake of the global refugee crisis, children are exposed to negative attitudes from public and private spheres. Previous research has identified family, peer, and school norms as significant predictors of children’s inter-ethnic attitudes. We extend this literature by examining normative influence from wider society, which has received substantially less attention. Among 266 children (Mage = 11.24), this study investigates the relative contributions of norms from five ingroups (family, class-peers, Irish, religious and all-humanity) to predict children’s anti-refugee bias. Perceptions of positive family and religious norms were the strongest unique predictors of contact intentions and warmth towards refugees. Intergroup anxiety and perceived threat mediated these relationships. Social dominance orientation mediated family normative influence only. These findings highlight the importance of broader groups (beyond that of proximal ingroups) for understanding children’s intergroup attitudes.
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In the wake of the global refugee crisis, children are exposed to negative attitudes from public and private spheres. Previous research has identified family, peer, and school norms as significant predictors of children’s inter-ethnic attitudes. We extend this literature by examining normative influence from wider society, which has received substantially less attention. Among 266 children (Mage = 11.24), this study investigates the relative contributions of norms from five ingroups (family, class-peers, Irish, religious and all-humanity) to predict children’s anti-refugee bias. Perceptions of positive family and religious norms were the strongest unique predictors of contact intentions and warmth towards refugees. Intergroup anxiety and perceived threat mediated these relationships. Social dominance orientation mediated family normative influence only. 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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Attitudes
Bias
Children
Children & youth
Dominance
Families & family life
Group identity
Intergroup anxiety
Intergroup bias
Ireland
Norms
Peers
Perceptions
Prejudice
Prejudice towards refugees
Public opinion
Refugees
Religion
School children
Social norms
Socialization
Threats
title Comparing normative influence from multiple groups: Beyond family, religious ingroup norms predict children’s prejudice towards refugees
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