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Cultural Values Moderate the Impact of Relative Deprivation

Authors :
Smith, Heather L
Ryan, Desiree D.A.
Jaurique, Alexandria
Pettigrew, Thomas T.F.
Jetten, Jolanda
Ariyanto, Amarina
Autin, Frédérique
Ayub, Nadia
Badea, Constantina
Besta, Tomasz
Butera, Fabrizio
Costa-Lopes, Rui
Cui, Lijuan
Fantini-Hauwel, Carole
Finchilescu, Gillian
Gaertner, Lowell
Gollwitzer, Mario
Gómez, Ángel
González, Roberto
Hong, Ying Yi
Høj Jensen, Dorthe
Karasawa, Minoru
Kessler, Thomas
Klein, Olivier
Lima, Marcus
Renvik, Tuuli Anna
Jasinskaja-Lahti, Inga
Megevand, Laura
Morton, Thomas
Paladino, Paola
Polya, Tibor
Ruza, Aleksejs
Shahrazad, Wan
Sharma, Sushama
Teymoori, Ali
Torres, Ana Raquel
Van Der Bles, Anne Marthe
Wohl, Michael
Smith, Heather L
Ryan, Desiree D.A.
Jaurique, Alexandria
Pettigrew, Thomas T.F.
Jetten, Jolanda
Ariyanto, Amarina
Autin, Frédérique
Ayub, Nadia
Badea, Constantina
Besta, Tomasz
Butera, Fabrizio
Costa-Lopes, Rui
Cui, Lijuan
Fantini-Hauwel, Carole
Finchilescu, Gillian
Gaertner, Lowell
Gollwitzer, Mario
Gómez, Ángel
González, Roberto
Hong, Ying Yi
Høj Jensen, Dorthe
Karasawa, Minoru
Kessler, Thomas
Klein, Olivier
Lima, Marcus
Renvik, Tuuli Anna
Jasinskaja-Lahti, Inga
Megevand, Laura
Morton, Thomas
Paladino, Paola
Polya, Tibor
Ruza, Aleksejs
Shahrazad, Wan
Sharma, Sushama
Teymoori, Ali
Torres, Ana Raquel
Van Der Bles, Anne Marthe
Wohl, Michael
Source :
Journal of cross-cultural psychology, 49 (8
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Relative deprivation (RD) is the judgment that one or one’s ingroup is worse off compared with some relevant standard coupled with feelings of dissatisfaction, anger, and resentment. RD predicts a wide range of outcomes, but it is unclear whether this relationship is moderated by national cultural differences. Therefore, in the first study, we used national assessments of individual-collectivism and power distance to code 303 effect sizes from 31 different countries with 200,578 participants. RD predicted outcomes ranging from life satisfaction to collective action more strongly within individualistic nations. A second survey of 6,112 undergraduate university students from 28 different countries confirmed the predictive value of RD. Again, the relationship between individual RD and different outcomes was stronger for students who lived in more individualistic countries. Group-based RD also predicted political trust more strongly for students who lived in countries marked by lower power distance. RD effects, although consistent predictors, are culturally bounded. In particular, RD is more likely to motivate reactions within individualistic countries that emphasize individual agency and achievement as a source of self-worth.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of cross-cultural psychology, 49 (8
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1055413623
Document Type :
Electronic Resource