Political ideology shapes the amplification of the accomplishments of disadvantaged vs. advantaged group members (original) (raw)

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Discrimination across the ideological divide: The role of value violations and abstract values in discrimination by liberals and conservatives, 2013

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Are There Ideological Asymmetries in Intergroup Bias? A Minimal Groups Approach

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Reward Omissions Variably Augment Racial Bias along Political Ideology

Micah Amd

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Ideology and social cognition

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Equality for (Almost) All: Egalitarian Advocacy Predicts Lower Endorsement of Sexism and Racism, but Not Ageism

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Ideology: Its Resurgence in Social, Personality, and Political Psychology

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I'm Not Prejudiced, but . . .": Compensatory Egalitarianism in the 2008 Democratic Presidential Primary

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Bringing Back the System: One Reason Why Conservatives are Happier Than Liberals is That Higher Socioeconomic Status Gives Them Access to More Group …

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Privilege and Marginality: How Group Identification and Personality Predict Right-and Left-Wing Political Activism

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Analysis of Social Issues and Public Policy, 2017

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Social Dominance Orientation and the Ideological Legitimization of Social Policy1

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Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1998

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Bringing Back the System: One Reason Why Conservatives are Happier Than Liberals is That Higher Socioeconomic Status Gives Them Access to More Group Memberships

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Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2013

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Anti-egalitarians for Obama? Group-dominance motivation and the Obama vote

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Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2009

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Hierarchy in the Eye of the Beholder: (Anti-)Egalitarianism Shapes Perceived Levels of Social Inequality

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Social dominance orientation: A personality variable predicting social and political attitudes

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Disentangling the Importance of Psychological Predispositions and Social Constructions in the Organization of American Political Ideology

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Costs and benefits of political ideology: The case of economic self-stereotyping and stereotype threat

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Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2010

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Smells Like Team Spirit: How Partisan Sorting and Identity Polarize Political Behavior

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Activating Animus: The Uniquely Social Roots of Trump Support

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Group-Based Dominance and Opposition to Equality Correspond to Different Psychological Motives

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Social Justice Research, 2010

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Jost et al. (2003) Political conservatism as motivated social cognition

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The Role of Social Ideologies in Legitimizing Political Attitudes and Public Policy

Felicia Pratto

Social Psychological Applications to Social Issues, 2002

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Opposing Paths to Ideology: Group-Based Relative Deprivation Predicts Conservatism Through Warmth Toward Ingroup and Outgroup Members

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The evolution of attitudes about social stratification: Why many people (including social scientists) are morally outraged by The Bell Curve

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Personality and Individual Differences, 1998

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Perpetuating one's own disadvantage: Intergroup contact enables the ideological legitimation of inequality

Nikhil Sengupta

Perpetuating one's own disadvantage: Intergroup contact enables the ideological legitimation of inequality, 2013

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Sengupta & Sibley 2013 Perpetuating One’s Own Disadvantage: Intergroup Contact Enables the Ideological Legitimation of Inequality

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Ideology and the Limits of Self-Interest: System Justification Motivation and Conservative Advantages in Mass Politics

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Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition

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Differences in negativity bias underlie variations in political ideology

Djuradj Caranovic

The Behavioral and brain sciences, 2014

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Equalitarianism: A Source of Liberal Bias

Roy Baumeister

Social Science Research Network, 2018

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Non-conscious forms of system justification: Implicit and behavioral preferences for higher status groups

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Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2002

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Nations' income inequality predicts ambivalence in stereotype content: How societies mind the gap

Rosa Rodríguez

British Journal of Social Psychology, 2013

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Explaining ideology: Two factors are better than one

Philip Robbins

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2014

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Jost, J. T., Glaser, J., Kruglanski, A. W., & Sullaway, F. J. (2003). Exceptions that prove the rule- Using a theory of motivated social cognition to account for ideological incongruities and political anomalies

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