1. Highly identified power-holders feel responsible: The interplay between social identification and social power within groups.
- Author
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Scholl A, Sassenberg K, Ellemers N, Scheepers D, and de Wit F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Group Processes, Leadership, Power, Psychological, Social Identification
- Abstract
Power relations affect dynamics within groups. Power-holders' decisions not only determine their personal outcomes, but also the outcomes of others in the group that they control. Yet, power-holders often tend to overlook this responsibility to take care of collective interests. The present research investigated how social identification - with the group to which both the powerful and the powerless belong - alters perceived responsibility among power-holders (and the powerless). Combining research on social power and social identity, we argue that power-holders perceive more responsibility than the powerless when strongly (rather than when weakly) identifying with the group. A study among leaders and an experiment supported this, highlighting that although power-holders are often primarily concerned about personal outcomes, they do feel responsible for considering others' interests when these others are included in the (social) self., (© 2017 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2018
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