Working for the Self or Working for the Group: How Self-Versus Group Affirmation Affects Collective Behavior in Low-Status Groups

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Experiencing social identity threat can lead members of stigmatized groups to protect their self-regard by withdrawing from domains that are associated with higher status groups. Four experiments examined how providing identity affirmation in alternative domains affects performance motivation in status-defining domains among stigmatized group members. Two forms of identity affirmation were distinguished: self-affirmation, which enhances personal identity, and group affirmation, which enhances social identity. The results showed that although self- and group affirmation both induce high performance motivation, they do so in different ways. Whereas self-affirmation induces a focus on the personal self, group affirmation induces a focus on the social self (Study 1). Accordingly, group affirmation elicited high performance motivation among highly identified group members (Studies I and 2) by inducing challenge (Study 2) and protected interest in group-serving behaviors that improve collective status (Studies 3 and 4). By contrast, low identifiers were challenged and motivated to perform well only after self-affirmation (Studies I and 2) and reported an even stronger inclination to work for themselves at the expense of the group when offered group affirmation (Studies 3 and 4).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)183-202
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume96
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • social identity threat
  • self-affirmation
  • performance motivation
  • collective action
  • challenge versus threat
  • SOCIAL IDENTITY
  • STEREOTYPE THREAT
  • INGROUP DIMENSIONS
  • GROUP MEMBERS
  • PERFORMANCE
  • SUCCESS
  • INFORMATION
  • FAILURE
  • MODEL
  • FOCUS

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