WEEK 3: Social identity approach 1 Flashcards
What two theories does the social identity approach include?
Social identity theory
Self categorisation theory
Personal identity
What is it?
How is it embodied?
Sense of ourselves as unique individuals, embodied by personal attributes
Social identity
How is it embodied?
Sense of ourselves as group members, embodied by shared attributes
Tajfels’s definition of social identity
What is it a part of? How is it created? What two things are attached to the membership?
Part of an individuals self concept which is created by ones knowledge about their membership in a social group/s and the value/emotional significance attached to that memebership
Which two people studied social identity theory?
Tajfel and Turner. 1979
Who studied Self categorisation theory?
Turner et al…, 1987
What is a Theory?
What does it describe?
what does it specify and predict
what does it produce?
A theory:
-describes a phenomenon in conceptual terms
-specifies and predicts relationships between concepts
-produces hypotheses that can be tested in research
Tajfel and Turner
Social identity theory
What kid of relation does this theory concern?
Why was this theory developed? (understand?)
This theory concerns intergroup relations and was developed to understand intergroup discrimination
Tajfel and Turner
Social identity theory
Why were the minimal group studies conducted?
The minimal group studies were conducted to identify the minimal conditions needed for intergroup discrimination to occur.
Tajfel and Turner
Social identity theory
What kid of studies did they conduct?
Minimal group studies
Tajfel, Billig, Bundy and Flament (1971)
Minimal group studies
Participants?
age range?
Groups?
Procedure?
Expectation?
Reality?
Was there a significance to the groups?
Evidence of?
Participants: British schoolboys aged 14-15 years old
Procedure: Divided into two groups (Klee or Kadinsky: painters)
Procedure: Participants were asked to allocate points to an anonymous member of both their group (ingroup) and the other group (outgroup)
Groups were MEANINGLESS
Alllocation of points
Expectation: allocated at random or given fairly
Reality: More points given to ingroup compared to outgroup
Evidence of group favouritism
Principles of social identity theory
Tajfel and Turner
What is a positive social identity based on?
What is employed when social identity is negative?
A positive social identity is based on favourable comparisons between the ingroup and some relevant outgroups
negative social identity = identity management srategy
What are the three identity management strategies?
Individual mobility
social creativity
social competition
What are the three criteria to consider when choosing which identity management strategy to use?
(What factors does the identity management strategy depend on?)
Identity management strategy depends on various socio-structural factors:
Perceived permeability of group boundaries
Perceived legitimacy of intergroup status relation
Perceived stability of the intergroup status relation
Which identity management strategy would be used if group boundaries were perceived as permeable?
Why?
If intergroup boundaries were perceived as permeable, identity management strategy of individual mobility would be used as group members are more likely to leave a low status groups to high status group or psychologically disassociate from the group