Perceived group victimization and discrimination among youth in a post-conflict community: The mediating role of ethnic upbringing practices and interethnic insecurity (CROSBI ID 640499)
Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Štambuk, Marina ; Taylor, Laura ; Löw, Ajana ; Čorkalo Biruški, Dinka ; Merrilees, Christine ; Ajduković, Dean ; Cummings, Mark
engleski
Perceived group victimization and discrimination among youth in a post-conflict community: The mediating role of ethnic upbringing practices and interethnic insecurity
Links between perceived in-group victimization and discrimination are well-documented. However, the mediating mechanisms are little understood, especially among youth and in a context of a post-conflict ethnic divide. Building upon Social Identity Theory and the Integrated Threat Theory we propose two mechanisms for in explaining the link between in-group victimization and discriminationory tendencies: the ethnic upbringing within a family that makes ethnicity a salient and relevant social cue which also makes youth feeling more insecure or even threatened when encounter the outgroup. The present study was conducted in the city of Vukovar, Croatia. Participants (N = 225) were youth in the city of Vukovar, Croatia, aged 15.88 years (SD = 1.12) years old, and roughly split by gender (59% male) and ethnicity (51% Croat, 49% Serb). The questionnaire measuring perceived group victimization, ethnic upbringing practices, interethnic insecurity, tendency to discriminatorye tendencies, perceived in-group discrimination and sociodemographics was group administered. Serial mediation was conducted using MLE with bootstrapping, controlling for age, gender, and ethnicity (Croats/Serbs). Variables were entered as manifest scales ; perceived group victimization was exogenous, ethnic upbringing practices and interethnic insecurity were mediators, and perceived discrimination and tendency to discriminatory tendenciese were the outcomes. There were significant indirect effects for both perceived discrimination (CI: .002, .014) and tendency to discriminatory tendenciese (CI: .003, .013). The results showed that children who perceived their in-group as being more victimized during the war were more prone to discriminate the outgroup and also perceived more in-group discrimination. These relations were mediated by more intensive ethnic upbringing, and more insecurity that youth felt when encountering the outgroup.
youth perception of in-group victimization ; ethnic upbringing practices ; youth interethnic insecurity ; discriminatory tendencies ; perceived in-group discrimination
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Podaci o prilogu
2016.
objavljeno
Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji
International Society of Political Psychology Annual Conference : abstracts
Podaci o skupu
International Society of Political Psychology Annual Conference
predavanje
13.07.2016-16.07.2016
Varšava, Poljska