Yayın: Antecedents and consequences of perceived misrecognition and perceived discrimination in ethnic minorities
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Yazarlar
Özdemir, Fatih
Doosje, Bertjan
Feddes, Allard R.
van Bergen, Naomi R.
Ayanian, Arin H.
Halabi, Slieman
Guevara, Yaatsil
Kende, Anna
Karic, Tijana
da Silva, Caroline
Danışman
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Yayıncı:
Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd
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Özet
This paper reports a quantitative investigation of the antecedents and consequences of misrecognition for group relations. Moreover, as we simultaneously take into account effects associated with perceived discrimination, we are able to show the added value of attending to the experience of misrecognition as a predictor of outcomes relevant to intergroup relations. The sample comprised 368 Dutch participants with an Antillean (n = 126), Chinese (n = 118), or Surinamese (n = 124) ethnic background. Results indicated that those who identified strongly with their ethnic group and who perceived other (so-called 'native') Dutch people as having negative perceptions of their ethnic group, reported greater levels of misrecognition and discrimination. In turn, higher levels of misrecognition and perceived discrimination were associated with participants reporting lower levels of Dutch identification, lower levels of trust in Dutch authorities, and a greater willingness to exhibit collective action on behalf of their ethnic trust in Dutch authorities, while perceived discrimination was more strongly associated with collective action tendencies. These findings point to the practical and theoretical importance of misrecognition: Both the experience of discrimination and misrecognition are relevant to un
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Konusu
Identity, Integration, Attitudes, Members, Think, Misrecognition, Perceived discrimination, Ethnic minority, Intergroup relations, Sustainable integration, Psychology, Social sciences - other topics, Sociology
