Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness

Social identity threats, depending on the content of the identity targeted, may evoke varying socio-political responses. In this regard, religious discrimination may be especially threatening, challenging both the social group and its belief system, thereby promoting more active collective responses...

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Main Authors: Renate Ysseldyk, Miki Talebi, Kimberly Matheson, Irene Bloemraad, Hymie Anisman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2014-12-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/232
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spelling doaj-5727c7fed8a345459908b91ff25748152020-11-25T02:41:33ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252014-12-012134737610.5964/jspp.v2i1.232jspp.v2i1.232Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political ConsciousnessRenate Ysseldyk0Miki Talebi1Kimberly Matheson2Irene Bloemraad3Hymie Anisman4Department of Health Sciences, Carleton University, Ottawa, CanadaDepartment of Psychology, Carleton University, Ottawa, CanadaDepartment of Health Sciences, Carleton University, Ottawa, CanadaSociology Department, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USADepartment of Neuroscience, Carleton University, Ottawa, CanadaSocial identity threats, depending on the content of the identity targeted, may evoke varying socio-political responses. In this regard, religious discrimination may be especially threatening, challenging both the social group and its belief system, thereby promoting more active collective responses. This research examined how religious and ethnic identification differentially evoked engagement with support resources (ingroup and spiritual), civic involvement (including individual and collective action-taking), and political participation (voting or political consciousness) following group-based threats. Study 1 drew from the Canadian Ethnic Diversity Survey (N = 1806). Participants who reported religious discrimination demonstrated greater religious identification, ingroup social engagement, and civic involvement—comparable associations were absent for ethnic discrimination. Study 2 (N = 287) experimentally primed participants to make salient a specific incident of religious or ethnic discrimination. Although ethnic discrimination elicited greater ingroup support-seeking and political consciousness, religious discrimination was perceived as especially harmful and evoked more individual and collective action-taking. Further to this, religious high-identifiers’ responses were mediated by engagement with ingroup or spiritual support in both studies, whereas no mediated relations were evident for ethnic identification. Findings are discussed in terms of distinct socio-political responses to threats targeting identities that are grounded in religious belief systems.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/232religionethnicitydiscriminationsocial supportcivic actionpolitical consciousnessidentity threat
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renate Ysseldyk
Miki Talebi
Kimberly Matheson
Irene Bloemraad
Hymie Anisman
spellingShingle Renate Ysseldyk
Miki Talebi
Kimberly Matheson
Irene Bloemraad
Hymie Anisman
Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
religion
ethnicity
discrimination
social support
civic action
political consciousness
identity threat
author_facet Renate Ysseldyk
Miki Talebi
Kimberly Matheson
Irene Bloemraad
Hymie Anisman
author_sort Renate Ysseldyk
title Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
title_short Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
title_full Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
title_fullStr Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
title_full_unstemmed Religious and Ethnic Discrimination: Differential Implications for Social Support Engagement, Civic Involvement, and Political Consciousness
title_sort religious and ethnic discrimination: differential implications for social support engagement, civic involvement, and political consciousness
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Social identity threats, depending on the content of the identity targeted, may evoke varying socio-political responses. In this regard, religious discrimination may be especially threatening, challenging both the social group and its belief system, thereby promoting more active collective responses. This research examined how religious and ethnic identification differentially evoked engagement with support resources (ingroup and spiritual), civic involvement (including individual and collective action-taking), and political participation (voting or political consciousness) following group-based threats. Study 1 drew from the Canadian Ethnic Diversity Survey (N = 1806). Participants who reported religious discrimination demonstrated greater religious identification, ingroup social engagement, and civic involvement—comparable associations were absent for ethnic discrimination. Study 2 (N = 287) experimentally primed participants to make salient a specific incident of religious or ethnic discrimination. Although ethnic discrimination elicited greater ingroup support-seeking and political consciousness, religious discrimination was perceived as especially harmful and evoked more individual and collective action-taking. Further to this, religious high-identifiers’ responses were mediated by engagement with ingroup or spiritual support in both studies, whereas no mediated relations were evident for ethnic identification. Findings are discussed in terms of distinct socio-political responses to threats targeting identities that are grounded in religious belief systems.
topic religion
ethnicity
discrimination
social support
civic action
political consciousness
identity threat
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/232
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