| Literature DB >> 28069955 |
Federica Durante1, Susan T Fiske2, Michele J Gelfand3, Franca Crippa4, Chiara Suttora4, Amelia Stillwell5, Frank Asbrock6, Zeynep Aycan7, Hege H Bye8, Rickard Carlsson9, Fredrik Björklund10, Munqith Dagher11, Armando Geller12, Christian Albrekt Larsen13, Abdel-Hamid Abdel Latif14, Tuuli Anna Mähönen15, Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti15, Ali Teymoori16.
Abstract
A cross-national study, 49 samples in 38 nations (n = 4,344), investigates whether national peace and conflict reflect ambivalent warmth and competence stereotypes: High-conflict societies (Pakistan) may need clearcut, unambivalent group images distinguishing friends from foes. Highly peaceful countries (Denmark) also may need less ambivalence because most groups occupy the shared national identity, with only a few outcasts. Finally, nations with intermediate conflict (United States) may need ambivalence to justify more complex intergroup-system stability. Using the Global Peace Index to measure conflict, a curvilinear (quadratic) relationship between ambivalence and conflict highlights how both extremely peaceful and extremely conflictual countries display lower stereotype ambivalence, whereas countries intermediate on peace-conflict present higher ambivalence. These data also replicated a linear inequality-ambivalence relationship.Keywords: ambivalence; conflict; inequality; peace; stereotypes
Year: 2017 PMID: 28069955 PMCID: PMC5278477 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1611874114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205