Cultural Values Moderate the Impact of Relative Deprivation

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_8052FA3BABF5
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Cultural Values Moderate the Impact of Relative Deprivation
Journal
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Author(s)
Smith Heather J., Ryan Desiree A., Jaurique Alexandria, Pettigrew Thomas F., Jetten Jolanda, Ariyanto Amarina, Autin Frédérique, Ayub Nadia, Badea Constantina, Besta Tomasz, Butera Fabrizio, Costa-Lopes Rui, Cui Lijuan, Fantini 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
ISSN
0022-0221
1552-5422
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2018
Volume
49
Number
8
Pages
1183-1218
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.
Keywords
Cultural Studies, Social Psychology, Anthropology
Web of science
Create date
27/08/2018 16:11
Last modification date
21/08/2019 7:09
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