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Parenting attitudes, career adaptability, and bicultural acceptance perceived by multicultural youth J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-18 Seokkyu Choi, Woohyoung Kim, Jungsuk Choi
This study explores whether the development of career adjustment and biculturalism among multicultural adolescents in Korean society changes over a three-year longitudinal period. To this end, a latent growth model (LGM) was adopted to examine the development of career adjustment and biculturalism among such adolescents. This study determines how the parenting attitudes in multicultural families affect
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When the shoe does not fit: The role of perspective‐taking orientation in a perspective‐taking prejudice reduction intervention J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-16 Hanna Szekeres, Nóra Anna Lantos, Laura Faragó, Boglárka Nyúl, Anna Kende
We tested how individuals' dispositional perspective‐taking impacts the effectiveness of an intergroup perspective‐taking intervention aimed to reduce anti‐Gypsyism in Hungary. For the intervention, we adapted a role‐playing book with a Roma adolescent protagonist (called the ‘Gypsy Maze’). We predicted that the intervention would be more effective in reducing prejudice for stronger perspective‐takers
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Developmental outcomes in Italian young cancer survivors: The effect of lack of social support in physical activity practice on quality of life and mental health J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Ambra Gentile, Luca Di Bartolo, Salvatore Ficarra, Sonia Ortega‐Gómez, David Jiménez‐Pavón, Apostolos Vantarakis, Joanna Velissari, Paula Tavares, Beatriz Gomes, Joshua Thaller, Sofia Papakonstantinou, Musa Kirkar, Francesca Glorioso, Susanna Pusa, Marina Galioto, Antonino Bianco, Marianna Alesi
Life expectancy among young cancer survivors has increased in the last decades. Unfortunately, young cancer survivors might still experience mental and physical issues due to cancer treatment. Moreover, although physical activity is a valid tool for increasing social support and reducing the risk of obesity, sedentary behaviour is very common among young cancer survivors. Therefore, the current pilot
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Social value, climate change, and environmental stewardship: Insights from theory and practice. By WilliamNikolakis, Renata MouradaVeiga, Cham: Springer. 2023. pp. 142. €106.99 (eBook). ISBN: 978‐3‐031‐23145‐2 (eBook) J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Dwi Nurul Ilmih Ahkam, Rezky Amalia Putri, Ye Fahmi Assagaf
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Sharing the neuroscience of living with housing instability: Collaborating with front‐line workers to co‐create a knowledge translation activity J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Ethan C. Draper, Heather J. Burgess, Cheryl Chisholm, Conor Barker, Erin L. Mazerolle
Traumatic brain injuries, mental illnesses and neurodevelopmental disorders are established risk factors for housing instability. Further, these brain‐associated conditions may result in additional barriers to accessing services. We explored perspectives of front‐line housing support workers concerning the neuroscience of housing instability to co‐create a knowledge translation (KT) activity. Interviews
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The importance of examining both the amount and balance of social support: A study on the relationship between social support and subjective well‐being of older Japanese adults J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Yukari Jessica Tham, Shohei Okamoto, Erika Kobayashi
Previous studies have highlighted that the balance between social support individuals receive and that they provide plays a crucial role in their well‐being. However, these studies predominantly focused on the balance without distinguishing situations where individuals receive and provide abundant support from situations where they receive and provide limited support. The present research emphasizes
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Male psychologists and female mathematicians: Gender beliefs and undergraduate degree choices J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-03-06 Madeleine Pownall, Nathan Heflick
Globally, men and women are numerically dominant in undergraduate degrees in math and psychology, respectively. A variety of theoretical perspectives predict that individuals who adhere more to gender stereotypes will be more represented in gender‐dominant fields. Using a pre‐registered methodology, we recruited men and women enrolled in psychology and math degree programmes in the United Kingdom and
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‘All about the NHS and what about the rest of us?’: Exploring how low‐paid health and social care workers construct key stakeholders and account for the UK's response to the COVID‐19 pandemic J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Tieran Buckley, Philippa Carr
Good practice on disaster response emphasises the importance of leadership and cohesive group identities. The COVID‐19 pandemic provided an opportunity to explore how low‐paid health and social care workers (HSCWs) accounted for the UK government's response, given worker's limited resources and disproportionate impact on their lives. Thirteen semi‐structured interviews took place with low‐paid HSCWs
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No identity connections without representation? Exploring associations between neighbourhood opportunities, ethnic–ideal alignment and well‐being in Black, Indigenous and other youths of colour in Canada J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Régine Debrosse, Alicia Boatswain‐Kyte, Syndie David, Gregory Gooding, Pierreson Vaval, Gina Lafortune
In Canada, Black, Indigenous and other youths of colour often have high aspirations, but many are not sure that they are attainable. Context can signal what is in or out of reach to youths, particularly environments that send repeated and proximal signals, like neighbourhoods. Notably, the Social Identity Approach suggests that in neighbourhoods with people like them doing well socioeconomically or
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Examining #StopAsianHate discourse on Twitter using framing and thematic analyses: Focusing on motivational framing with express behaviour upon the 2021 Atlanta shootings J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-22 Claire Seungeun Lee, Ahnlee Jang
In separate events on March 16, 2021, an armed man walked into a spa and a massage parlour in Atlanta and shot eight people, six of whom were women of Asian descendant. Within the first week of the Atlanta shootings, more than 400,000 tweets with the hashtag #StopAsianHate emerged in response to the violence. To highlight the importance of this issue, this current study analyses 5,146 English tweets
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Relationship between face‐to‐face and non‐face‐to‐face communication, and well‐being in older volunteers during the pandemic: The REPRINTS project J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-20 Kyoko Fujihira, Tomoya Takahashi, Tomoya Sagara, Hiroko Matsunaga, Koji Fujita, Hiroyuki Suzuki, Hiroshi Murayama, Yoshinori Fujiwara
Volunteering older adults plays a role in maintaining well‐being through facilitation of face‐to‐face communication. However, the COVID‐19 pandemic reduced volunteer opportunities involving physical interaction among seniors. While studies have reported that indirect communication such as non‐face‐to‐face can support and improve mental health, it remains unclear whether it can substitute face‐to‐face
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The working relationship between people in marginalised situations and street outreach workers J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-14 Evelien Rauwerdink-Nijland, Linda van den Dries, Judith Metz, Arnoud Verhoeff, Judith Wolf
A good working relationship between clients and professionals increases the chances of better intervention outcomes for clients. A longitudinal cohort study was carried out amongst clients who were in touch with professionals from a Dutch social street work (SSW) organisation. We used a questionnaire to examine client perspectives (n = 332) on the relational and goal-oriented part of the working relationship
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Transitioning vocational education and training in Africa: A social skills ecosystem perspective. By Simon McGrath, Bristol University Press, United Kingdom (UK). 2022. pp. 232. $24.99 (paperback). ISBN: 978-1-5292-2463-4 J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Andi Nuralfiah, Andi Nurliana, Syamsul Fajri
CONFLICT OF INTEREST STATEMENT None of the authors have a conflict of interest to disclose.
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‘It's a sanity restorer’: Narcotics anonymous (NA) as recovery capital during COVID-19 in Aotearoa New Zealand J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-26 Meghan Mappledoram, Denise Blake, Kathryn McGuigan, Darrin Hodgetts
Narcotics Anonymous has flourished globally across 143 countries as a key community response to problematic substance use, despite disruptions, including the COVID-19 pandemic. This research sought to understand how the Aotearoa New Zealand Narcotics Anonymous (NA) community engaged with NA meetings online during the 2020–2021 COVID-19 pandemic. During in-depth, semi-structured interviews, 11 NA members
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Supporting adolescents' leisure time physical activity in low-income areas: A qualitative systematic review of participant, parent and stakeholder perspectives on family and community interventions J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Camilla Bakkær Simonsen, Barbara Egilstrød, Charlotte Overgaard, Sine Agergaard
In low-income communities, there is often a lack of resources and facilities for adolescents to engage in organized sports and leisure time physical activity. Therefore, different intervention strategies have been applied to promote physical activity. Yet, a systematic overview of the experiences of those involved in the interventions is lacking. Thus, the purpose of this qualitative systematic review
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Running women or women runners: Does identity salience affect intention to exercise outside and feelings of safety? J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Lisa Skilton, Grace McMahon, Orla T. Muldoon
Safety concerns for women are prevalent and influence their likelihood to exercise outside. While some women modify their exercise behaviour due to safety concerns, others exercise outside more freely. In this paper, two experiments are reported with women runners to examine whether making their identity as a runner or a woman salient changed their self-reported likelihood of exercising outside, sense
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‘Sins of their fathers’: Social groups parental incarceration and positive psychological outcomes across time in the US and UK J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Daragh Bradshaw, Islam Bornica, Siobhán M. Griffin, Grace McMahon, Orla T. Muldoon
Paternal incarceration (PI) is recognised as a severely stigmatising event that undermines social connections leaving affected children isolated and vulnerable. However, few studies have explored social group membership as a potential mediator of positive outcomes. This paper analysed data from two national contexts, Scotland and the United States, to examine the potential for social group membership
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Socio-psychological barriers preventing people from helping in times of crisis: A scoping review J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Małgorzata Kossowska, Paulina Szwed, Aneta Czernatowicz-Kukuczka, Jolanta Perek-Białas, Ewa Szumowska, Arie W. Kruglanski, Kaja Gadowska, Marta Kamińska, Wojciech Załuski
A robust field of research has elucidated when and why people are willing to offer help in times of crisis. Yet helping behaviour does not always occur when needed, and the absence of helping during crisis is less well studied. By broadly defining a crisis as an extremely difficult, disruptive and dangerous situation, which may result in possible harm to individuals, groups and societies, this article
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All Lives Matter discussions on Twitter: Varied use, prevalence, and interpretive repertoires J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Simon Goodman, Krystal M. Perkins, Friederike Windel
All Lives Matter (ALM) has emerged as a response to, and critique of, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) anti-racist movement. ALM has been shown to work to undermine and attempt to deracialise BLM; however, there is a need for a comprehensive understanding of how ALM functions in online interactions. The research questions are therefore: What different ways is ALM used in Twitter debates?, How prevalent
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Groups or values? Testing the effectiveness of online social cure, group-affirmation, and self-affirmation manipulations on wellbeing outcomes J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Peter R. Harris, Matthew J. Easterbrook
We tested the effectiveness of three brief, online manipulations theorised to have beneficial effects on wellbeing: a social cure manipulation priming important group memberships, a self-affirmation manipulation priming important values, and a group-affirmation manipulation priming values important to one's group. A control condition required respondents to reflect on films. Study 1 (N = 201) had no
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Longitudinal associations between psychological and social well-being: Exploring within-person dynamics J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-18 Mohsen Joshanloo
This study examines the longitudinal associations between psychological and social well-being, which represent the private and public dimensions of eudaimonic well-being, respectively. Data were drawn from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) project (N = 6,453). Participants were assessed at three-time points, each approximately a decade apart. Both between-person and within-person associations
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Investigating the link between biological dehumanization and indirect aggression J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Roberta Rosa Valtorta, Cristina Baldissarri, Chiara Volpato
The present research aims at expanding the literature on biologization (i.e., a form of dehumanization in which others are perceived as contagious entities) by providing the first empirical evidence of the link between this sociopsychological process and indirect aggression (i.e., behaviours intended to harm someone in a roundabout manner, such as excluding them from a group or society). We first identified
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Feeling similar, being different: Immigrant youth, multicultural identities and coping with discrimination J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-13 Anna Miglietta, Marco Rizzo, Margherita Rossi
Most of the social psychology literature focuses on the difficulties that young people of migrant backgrounds (YMBs) living in Western countries have in negotiating multicultural identities and developing a sense of belonging to two cultures, emphasizing the negative consequences of feeling discriminated against. However, how YMBs who self-identify as multicultural reconcile their feelings of integration
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Perceptions of domestic and extra-domestic environment during the COVID-19 pandemic in an Italian representative sample J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-11 Manuel Faggiano, Silvia Donato, Miriam Parise, Ariela Francesca Pagani, Laura Ferrari, Sonia Ranieri, Elena Canzi, Francesca Vittoria Danioni, Daniela Barni, Margherita Lanz, Camillo Regalia, Rosa Regina Rosnati, Raffaella Iafrate
Perception of domestic and extra-domestic environment plays a key role in structuring reality, representing the boundary between private and public life. COVID-19 pandemic led to changes both inside and outside domestic borders, modifying those reciprocal perceptions. The aim of this study was to assess perceptions of domestic and extra-domestic environments after the first wave of COVID-19 pandemic
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‘To succeed at work, you just need to work hard’: How beliefs in professional meritocracy serve to blame unemployed people J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Charlotte Rauscher, Eva Louvet, David Bourguignon
Unemployed people constitute a stigmatized group. They are perceived as lazy hucksters who could find a job if they just really tried. The aim of the present work was to identify mechanisms underlying this negative perception of unemployment in the context of intergroup relationships. Specifically, we focused on the influence of meritocratic beliefs on the tendency to attribute unemployment to the
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‘Take Back the Land’: Analysis of the influence of environmental concern, cultural tightness and moral disengagement on pro-environmental behaviour intentions J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Daniela Di Santo, Dario Di Santo, Antonio Pierro
Our study found that individuals' environmental concerns are positively associated with their pro-environmental behavioural intentions through increased desired cultural tightness and reduced moral disengagement. Based on past research on (a) the positive association between personal concerns for ecological threats and desire for strong rules and punishment for violation (i.e., cultural tightness)
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The more diverse the better: Identifying with a diverse neighbourhood mother community predicts greater intergroup contact J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-09 Reetta Riikonen, Eerika Finell, Tuija Seppälä, Clifford Stevenson
Although it has been shown that identification with a neighbourhood community can support intergroup relations within the community by providing resources to cope with intergroup contact, previous research has not investigated how the perceived diversity of the neighbourhood identity influences this process. This study extends research on neighbourhood identification by focusing on a specific group
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‘We like because we feel liked’ exposure to cultural fusion improves outgroup attitudes through contact metacognition J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-06 Yan Bao, Weichao Wang, Yufang Zhao, Dongfang Yu, Njoroge Willie, Bing Chen
Based on the common ingroup identity model and the principle of group reciprocity, this study proposes that exposure to cultural fusion can improve outgroup attitudes by activating positive contact metacognition, that is, the subjective perception of the outgroup's desire for contact with the ingroup. To test this hypothesis, we conducted three experiments with Chinese Yi students. They were randomly
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‘We need community’: Bridging the path to desistance from crime with community football J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-12-04 Martha Newson, Linus Peitz, Honor Gitsham, Hiro Imada, Dominic Abrams
Recidivism costs society, communities, families and individuals. Sport is heralded as an accessible way to engage and incentivise people convicted of crime to change their lifestyles. One high-profile intervention designed to reduce reoffending rates is the Twinning Project, which invites people serving custodial and community sentences to participate in a football-based programme to gain accredited
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Enhancing school capacity to adopt school behavioural health best practices: A multiple-case study evaluation J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-28 Olga Acosta Price, Michael Long, Rachel Sadlon, Linda Sheriff
Comprehensive school behavioural health best practices are widely disseminated. How to build schools’ capacity to implement these interventions is not well understood. This study explored how a coordinated set of capacity-building strategies (e.g., individualized technical assistance [TA], community of practice [CoP]) facilitated the adoption of school behavioural health best practices. A multiple-case
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Women as bodies. The role of ambivalent sexism and sexual objectification on non-consensual sharing of sexting images J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-22 Barbara Agueli, Ciro Esposito, Caterina Arcidiacono, Immacolata Di Napoli
Discriminatory attitudes towards women are still widespread and have also pervaded the digital world. They are often connected with the propensity to view and treat women as sexual objects, which sometimes leads to negative and harmful behaviours, such as the sharing of intimate images without the partner's consent. The present study aims at investigating the non-consensual sharing of intimate images
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Lay representations of populism: Discursive negotiation of naturalized social representation J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-20 Helena Rovamo, Inari Sakki
Despite the importance of naturalized representations for explaining, creating and recreating social reality, little empirical research has examined the resistance to and change in naturalized representations in talk. By approaching populism as a naturalized representation, this article examines the dialogical construction of populism in 55 Finnish lay interviews. Our analysis consists of two parts
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Correction to “Solidarity with everyone? Intergroup helping and COVID-19” J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-16
Yemane, R., Arnu, H., Aithal, L., Rees, J., Veit, S., & Wölfer, R. (2023). Solidarity with everyone? Intergroup helping and COVID-19. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 33(5), 1309–1326. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2714 In 4.1 Method and sample section, the sixth sentence ‘Both the field experiment (study 1) and the survey experiment (study 2) received ethics clearance from the relevant
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Brothers and sisters in arms: A mixed-methods investigation of the roles played by military support and social identity processes in the mental health of veterans during the transition to veterancy J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-16 Juliet R. H. Wakefield, Mhairi Bowe, Blerina Këllezi, Catherine Haslam, Sarah V. Bentley, Zara Milani, Helen Gair, James S. A. McIntosh
The transition to veterancy can be psychologically challenging, and although the military provides support, the importance of social connectedness for well-being is largely unrecognised. The significance of this oversight is highlighted by the Social Identity Model of Identity Change (SIMIC), which conceptualises life change as social identity change. SIMIC has been applied to numerous life transitions
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Supraordinate identity integration in childhood: Intergroup implications of ethno-national and supraordinate identification in three divided societies J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Isabelle Nic Craith, Bethany Corbett, Jasmina Tomašić Humer, Ana Tomovska Misoska, Edona Maloku, Jocelyn B. Dautel, Laura K. Taylor
An overarching, supraordinate identity (e.g., European identity) can enhance intergroup relations if individuals recategorize ingroup and outgroup members into one, unified group. Yet, in conflict-affected societies, ethno-national identities may promote negative intergroup attitudes and behaviours. The effects of European and ethno-national identities in combination have yet to be explored in childhood
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The interplay between diversity climate and multiculturalism policy: How diversity contexts shape student collective voice J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Jessica Gale, Karen Phalet
Existing research has largely acknowledged the importance of context in facilitating voice in culturally diverse institutions. However, most research has been situated empirically at the individual- rather than collective or context-level. In the present research, multilevel modelling was used to examine the effect of school diversity context on students' perceived collective voice. Based on data from
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Community arts, identity and recovery: A realist review of how community-based arts activities enables the identity change recovery process from serious mental illness J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-08 Louisa Anne Peters, Tim Gomersall, Andrew Booth, Mike Lucock
Identity has been empirically established as a recovery process from serious mental illness (SMI) yet is often overlooked within intervention evaluations. Community arts presents one such intervention with emerging evidence illustrating the potential for recovery to occur within this context. However, research indicates numerous mechanisms may be involved in the identity recovery process, making it
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Cuing disparities: The consequences of race-based social stressors for academic achievement J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-11-07 Dorainne J. Green, Kathryn M. Kroeper, Mary C. Murphy
Underrepresented racially and ethnically minoritized (URM) students contend with individual-level race-based stressors in college, like racialized discrimination and microaggressions. In this study, we consider whether URM students' perceptions of racial inequity on campus—a context-level race-based stressor—trigger adverse psychological and physical stress responses that, in turn, undermine academic
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Political tolerance and the golden rule: Reciprocity increases acceptance of normative protest actions of disliked groups J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Maykel Verkuyten, Kumar Yogeeswaran, Levi Adelman
The golden rule is a widespread moral guide for preventing conflict across cultures and religions, and reciprocity is foundational to political tolerance. This raises the question of whether the golden rule has an impact on one's willingness to tolerate political protest actions of disliked ideological groups. In the current research, we examined whether making salient golden rule reciprocity impacts
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Multiple existential threats and attitudes towards Muslims in Finland and Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-10-19 Viivi Eskelinen, Loris Vezzali, Antonio Di Bernardo, Inga Jasinskaja-Lahti
We are currently living in a time of several existential threats: the global pandemic COVID-19, climate change, and the ‘refugee crisis’ caused by violent conflicts and humanitarian catastrophes in Syria, Afghanistan, and Ukraine. These threats do not only affect our well-being but also our sense of control and security, as well as identities and worldviews having also intergroup consequences. In this
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Who cares? Effects of gendered self-perceptions on dropout intentions in communal degree programs J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-10-12 Marte Olsen, Elizabeth J. Parks-Stamm, Ingvild Marie Hansen Lund, Sarah E. Martiny
Global population aging trends create an increased need for educated workers in the health domain. At the same time, communal degree programs (i.e., health care and early education [HEE]) show high dropout rates—particularly for men. Extending person-environment fit theory and the lack of fit model, we investigate whether students' (gendered) self-perceptions relate to perceived fit and whether fit
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Profiles of volunteers' motivations and positive experiences relate to their sustained volunteering during the COVID-19 pandemic J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-10-04 Guoliang Qu, Enxia Ju, Guanglun Qin, Xuhai Chen, Yangmei Luo
Volunteering benefits individuals and society but is hard to sustain, especially in emergencies. Based on the volunteer process model and self-determination theory, this study identified the optimal number of motivations and positive experiences profiles and investigated these profiles' relationships with volunteers' sustained volunteering during the COVID-19 pandemic. Seven hundred and eighteen volunteers
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Minority arguments on integration: Arabs in the Southern European state of Malta J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Luke J. Buhagiar, Gordon Sammut
Intercultural relations benefit from the social psychological study of arguments made by different groups about joint projects of mutual concern. This focus allows researchers to map representations of the project in question, among communities in different cultural milieus. This paper presents a study looking at Arabs' views on the project of integration. Arabs' perspectives revolved around six argumentative
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‘Hey, teach these kids to eat their own food!’: Institutional intergroup contact in immigrant mothers' talk J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-26 Paula Paajanen, Eerika Finell, Reetta Riikonen, Clifford Stevenson
Although informal segregation often persists in multiethnic neighbourhoods, local institutions offering public services may act as an important setting for intergroup contact. Therefore, we studied how immigrant mothers of young children discursively construct institutional intergroup contact with workers of public playgrounds and kindergartens. We conducted longitudinal interviews with 10 immigrant
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Juggling risks: A social representations investigation of women, pregnancy and COVID-19 vaccination J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-21 Shayleigh Walker-Jones, Gail Moloney, Marie Hutchinson
Pregnant women are at disproportionate risk of harm from contracting COVID-19, but pregnant women in regional Australia have been less likely to be vaccinated than their non-pregnant counterparts. This longitudinal research drew from social representations theory to investigate emerging social knowledge associated with the COVID-19 virus and COVID-19 vaccination concerning women and pregnancy in regional
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Exploring the delivery of community-based trauma support by volunteer counsellors in a South African context J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-19 Mariette Henning-Pugh, Hannah Frith, Mon Ami Trauma Troops
South Africa experiences high levels of violence and trauma in a context where formal mental healthcare is not widely accessible. Lay (non-professional) trauma counselling services, staffed by volunteers, often fill this gap in provision. Extant research highlights the risk of secondary traumatic stress and burnout for volunteers, and although volunteering is often a collective activity, research typically
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The interplay of community resilience potential, trust in the future and social well-being J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-13 Alessia Rochira, Tiziana Marinaci, Evelyn De Simone, Terri Mannarini, Cosima Valentino, Enrico Ciavolino, Serena Verbena, Paola Pasca
Community resilience (CR) has been mainly investigated as the ability of the community to respond to far-reaching circumstances. Relatively less attention has been given to the understanding of CR as the ability of the community to deal with everyday problems, that is, community resilience potential (CRP). Using partial least squares path modelling, this study aims to elucidate how communities deal
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Narrative incongruence in pandemic local governance: Mayors perform responsibility as communities demand responsiveness J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-12 Cristina J. Montiel, Erwine S. Dela Paz, Joshua Uyheng, Ed Joseph Bulilan
Social psychological scholarship highlights the value of leadership for mounting effective responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet considerably less is known about whether leaders and their respective communities talk about the social crisis in the same way. Through a narrative congruence framework, we interrogate how public storylines of leaders and their communities align or misalign. Utilizing a
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From the iron cage to ‘La Jaula de Oro’: Music as a cultural object J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-09-09 Liliana V. Rodriguez
The norteño band Los Tigres del Norte (LTDN) are widely known as the ‘voice’ of the undocumented community for using their music as a vehicle to create and raise social consciousness on pressing issues of immigration. Utilizing Griswold's cultural diamond approach to analysing culture, I examine the culture/society relationship that emerges from their musical repertoire. Using this sociological model
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What should I say? Online dating and disclosure experiences of adults with mental illness in long-term romantic relationships J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Catherine H. Stein, Frances J. Griffith, Melissa F. Rudd, Maria A. Kalantzis
The present study examined accounts of online and in-person dating experiences from adults with mental illness who are in long-term romantic relationships (N = 23). In focus group discussions, participants described their views of advantages and disadvantages of online dating and in-person dating, how they constructed online dating profiles, decisions about disclosure of their mental health conditions
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The unkindest cut of all: A quantitative study of betrayal narratives J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-23 Fanny Lalot
All close relationships come with the risk of experiencing betrayal. Despite its relevance for interpersonal relationships, the literature lacks updated knowledge about the types of betrayals people are more likely to experience and their differential consequences. This paper's aim is twofold: first, to replicate and update past findings from the 1990s to 2000s regarding the typology of betrayal narratives;
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What drives young workers? Person-organization fit-in identity motives—A mixed-method study J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-21 Claudia Manzi, Mara Gorli, Eleonora Reverberi, Eleonora Crapolicchio, Camillo Regalia, Pamela Valenzisi
Person-organization fit theory is among the most productive theoretical frameworks used to assess the relationship between an organization and its employees. Nevertheless, the P-O fit literature has often limited its scope to the evaluation of P-O fit in the values domain, overlooking P-O fit-in needs. This study addresses this issue under the motivated identity construction theory (MICT, Vignoles
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Ironies of proximity: Intergroup threat and contact avoidance on neighbourhood interface areas J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-14 John Dixon, Colin Tredoux, Kevin Durrheim, Philippa Kerr, Brice Gijbertsen
Research on the dynamics of neighbourhood desegregation and diversity has identified a paradox. On the one hand, such processes may engender positive intergroup contact experiences, improving intergroup attitudes and relations. On the other hand, they may have the opposite effect, exacerbating negative intergroup relations and generating new forms of avoidance and exclusion. The present research explored
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Immigrant collective civic action: Integrating group resilience into the social identity model of collective action J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-13 Serena Verbena, Fortuna Procentese, Flora Gatti, Enrico Ciavolino, Terri Mannarini
Based on the social identity model of collective action (SIMCA), this study examined factors associated with immigrant collective civic action, while also testing the role of group resilience. A convenience sample of 226 first-generation immigrants (58.6% female) of different nationalities completed a self-report questionnaire. Partial least squares path modelling was used to test a model assessing
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Social support and self-efficacy serially mediate the association of strength of identification with text-based crisis support line volunteers' compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-10 Alanna Donnellan, Daragh Bradshaw, Jennifer McMahon
Help-line services provide a vital support to individuals experiencing mental or personal crisis. Recent years has seen a rise in both text-based services as well as remote working conditions for those who offer help-line services. Previous research has demonstrated positive and negative outcomes for individuals voluntarily offering support at crisis-line services. However, few studies have focused
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“Not wanting to see it is hypocrisy, it's denying what is obvious”: Far-right discriminatory discourses mobilised as common sense J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-08 Daniel Garcia-Jaramillo, Tânia R. Santos, Maria Fernandes-Jesus
The far-right recently entered the Portuguese parliament with the election of André Ventura, leader of the political party Chega. Since 2019, Chega has grown exponentially and has become the third political force. This study aimed to explore how Ventura represents different members of Portuguese society. We examine what meanings are reproduced to configure social representations about different category
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A social identity approach to mental health help-seeking behaviour in prisoners: A systematic review J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-03 Eimear Byrne, Daragh Bradshaw, Michelle Kerin, Irene Pepe
Prevalence of mental health difficulties is demonstrably higher in prison rather than general populations. Compounding this, prisoners often display a reluctance to seek help, which can undermine rehabilitation. Recent years has seen an increase in studies exploring the factors involved in help-seeking behaviours amongst prisoners. However, many of these studies come from different disciplines and
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When coupled with anti-egalitarianism, colour evasion predicts protection of the status quo during a university-wide movement for racial justice J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-02 Crystal L. Hoyt, Kristjen B. Lundberg, Mckennah Lauber, Helen Wallace, Anna Marston
Movements for racial justice on college campuses can have wide-ranging implications for promoting justice and well-being. In this research, we sought to better understand how the dominant ideology of colour evasion might serve to protect the inequitable status quo. Believing that ‘people should not see race anymore’ can have different implications for efforts to reduce racial inequities depending on
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Positive and negative contact between Africans and native Italians: Importance for migrants' collective action in support of their and other groups' rights J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-08-02 Francesca Prati, Corine Stella Kana Kenfack, Miles Hewstone, Monica Rubini
This research investigates the positive and negative contact experiences of African migrants with native Italians and the association between contact and behavioural intentions to reduce social inequalities. Two studies examined the associations between intergroup contact of migrants and their collective action in support of their or other group members, by testing the mediating role of positive and
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Child and adolescent well-being: Potentials of intersectionality for community psychology J. Community Appl. Soc. Psychol. (IF 2.968) Pub Date : 2023-07-28 M. Isidora Bilbao-Nieva, Jaime Alfaro Inzunza
This theoretical article aims to recognize the potential of intersectionality theory for understanding well-being during childhood and adolescence, particularly from a community psychology perspective. Following the tenets of intersectionality, the article analyses and proposes three relevant dimensions for community psychologists, researchers and professionals interested in studying and intervening