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      The psychological bases of ideology and prejudice: testing a dual process model.

      Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
      Adult, Authoritarianism, Female, Humans, Male, Personality, Personality Inventory, Political Systems, Prejudice, Questionnaires, Sampling Studies

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          Abstract

          The issue of personality and prejudice has been largely investigated in terms of authoritarianism and social dominance orientation. However, these seem more appropriately conceptualized as ideological attitudes than as personality dimensions. The authors describe a causal model linking dual dimensions of personality, social world view, ideological attitudes, and intergroup attitudes. Structural equation modeling with data from American and White Afrikaner students supported the model, suggesting that social conformity and belief in a dangerous world influence authoritarian attitudes, whereas toughmindedness and belief in a competitive jungle world influence social dominance attitudes, and these two ideological attitude dimensions influence intergroup attitudes. The model implies that dual motivational and cognitive processes, which may be activated by different kinds of situational and intergroup dynamics, may underlie 2 distinct dimensions of prejudice.

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          (Dis)respecting versus (Dis)liking: Status and Interdependence Predict Ambivalent Stereotypes of Competence and Warmth

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            In-group favouritism and the reflection of realistic dimensions of difference between national states in Central and Eastern European nationality stereotypes

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