1. Coping with negative social identity: the case of Mexican immigrants.
- Author
-
Shinnar RS
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mexico ethnology, Nevada, Psychological Theory, Adaptation, Psychological, Emigrants and Immigrants psychology, Mexican Americans psychology, Self Concept, Social Identification, Stereotyping
- Abstract
Social identity theory suggests that an individual's self-concept is shaped through group identification and positive social identities are established by favorably comparing the individual's in-group against an out-group. When unfavorable intergroup comparisons occur, individuals perceive a negative social identity. Because of the motivation to maintain a positive self-concept, this perception creates a need to cope. On the basis of face-to-face interviews with Mexican immigrants, the author examined the ways in which negative social-identity perceptions triggered different coping mechanisms. The findings offer support for two coping mechanisms--individual mobility and social creativity, with social creativity used more often than individual mobility.
- Published
- 2008
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