The different effects of collective narcissism and secure ingroup identity on collective action and life satisfaction among LGBTQ+ individuals

For LGBTQ+ community members, one way to cope with the discrimination they experience is through a stronger ingroup identity. However, not all types of ingroup identity may be equally beneficial to LGBTQ+ individuals. A longitudinal (N = 1,044) and a cross-sectional (N = 8,464) study among LGBTQ+ pe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Group processes & intergroup relations 2024-02, Vol.27 (2), p.366-392
Hauptverfasser: Górska, Paulina, Stefaniak, Anna, Matera, Joanna, Marchlewska, Marta
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:For LGBTQ+ community members, one way to cope with the discrimination they experience is through a stronger ingroup identity. However, not all types of ingroup identity may be equally beneficial to LGBTQ+ individuals. A longitudinal (N = 1,044) and a cross-sectional (N = 8,464) study among LGBTQ+ people in Poland demonstrated that collective narcissism was a positive predictor of group-based anger (Study 2) and had a positive reciprocal relationship with group relative deprivation (GRD; Study 1), however, it was negatively related to life satisfaction and exhibited a stronger positive link with nonnormative than normative collective action. Secure LGBTQ+ identification was not longitudinally predicted by GRD (Study 1) and showed a weaker positive association with group-based anger (Study 2). It had a reciprocal positive relationship with life satisfaction and was a stronger predictor of normative than nonnormative collective action. These results show that whereas secure ingroup identity is a clearly positive coping mechanism, the effects of collective narcissism are mixed.
ISSN:1368-4302
1461-7188
DOI:10.1177/13684302221147125