12 results on '"Varela, Micaela"'
Search Results
2. A 32‐society investigation of the influence of perceived economic inequality on social class stereotyping
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Tanjitpiyanond, P, Jetten, J, Peters, K, Ashokkumar, A, Barry, O, Billet, M, Becker, M, Booth, R, Castro, D, Chinchilla, J, Costantini, G, Dejonckheere, E, Dimdins, G, Erbas, Y, Espinosa, A, Finchilescu, G, Gómez, Á, González, R, Goto, N, Hatano, A, Hartwich, L, Jarukasemthawee, S, Karunagharan, J, Novak, L, Kim, J, Kohút, M, Liu, Y, Loughnan, S, Onyishi, I, Onyishi, C, Varela, M, Pattara‐angkoon, I, Peker, M, Pisitsungkagarn, K, Rizwan, M, Suh, E, Swann, W, Tong, E, Turner, R, Vanhasbroeck, N, Van Lange, P, Vauclair, C, Vinogradov, A, Wacera, G, Wang, Z, Wibisono, S, Yeung, V, Tanjitpiyanond, Porntida, Jetten, Jolanda, Peters, Kim, Ashokkumar, Ashwini, Barry, Oumar, Billet, Matthew, Becker, Maja, Booth, Robert W., Castro, Diego, Chinchilla, Juana, Costantini, Giulio, Dejonckheere, Egon, Dimdins, Girts, Erbas, Yasemin, Espinosa, Agustín, Finchilescu, Gillian, Gómez, Ángel, González, Roberto, Goto, Nobuhiko, Hatano, Aya, Hartwich, Lea, Jarukasemthawee, Somboon, Karunagharan, Jaya Kumar, Novak, Lindsay M., Kim, Jinseok P., Kohút, Michal, Liu, Yi, Loughnan, Steve, Onyishi, Ike E., Onyishi, Charity N., Varela, Micaela, Pattara‐angkoon, Iris S., Peker, Müjde, Pisitsungkagarn, Kullaya, Rizwan, Muhammad, Suh, Eunkook M., Swann, William, Tong, Eddie M. W., Turner, Rhiannon N., Vanhasbroeck, Niels, Van Lange, Paul A. M., Vauclair, Christin‐Melanie, Vinogradov, Alexander, Wacera, Grace, Wang, Zhechen, Wibisono, Susilo, Yeung, Victoria Wai‐Lan, Tanjitpiyanond, P, Jetten, J, Peters, K, Ashokkumar, A, Barry, O, Billet, M, Becker, M, Booth, R, Castro, D, Chinchilla, J, Costantini, G, Dejonckheere, E, Dimdins, G, Erbas, Y, Espinosa, A, Finchilescu, G, Gómez, Á, González, R, Goto, N, Hatano, A, Hartwich, L, Jarukasemthawee, S, Karunagharan, J, Novak, L, Kim, J, Kohút, M, Liu, Y, Loughnan, S, Onyishi, I, Onyishi, C, Varela, M, Pattara‐angkoon, I, Peker, M, Pisitsungkagarn, K, Rizwan, M, Suh, E, Swann, W, Tong, E, Turner, R, Vanhasbroeck, N, Van Lange, P, Vauclair, C, Vinogradov, A, Wacera, G, Wang, Z, Wibisono, S, Yeung, V, Tanjitpiyanond, Porntida, Jetten, Jolanda, Peters, Kim, Ashokkumar, Ashwini, Barry, Oumar, Billet, Matthew, Becker, Maja, Booth, Robert W., Castro, Diego, Chinchilla, Juana, Costantini, Giulio, Dejonckheere, Egon, Dimdins, Girts, Erbas, Yasemin, Espinosa, Agustín, Finchilescu, Gillian, Gómez, Ángel, González, Roberto, Goto, Nobuhiko, Hatano, Aya, Hartwich, Lea, Jarukasemthawee, Somboon, Karunagharan, Jaya Kumar, Novak, Lindsay M., Kim, Jinseok P., Kohút, Michal, Liu, Yi, Loughnan, Steve, Onyishi, Ike E., Onyishi, Charity N., Varela, Micaela, Pattara‐angkoon, Iris S., Peker, Müjde, Pisitsungkagarn, Kullaya, Rizwan, Muhammad, Suh, Eunkook M., Swann, William, Tong, Eddie M. W., Turner, Rhiannon N., Vanhasbroeck, Niels, Van Lange, Paul A. M., Vauclair, Christin‐Melanie, Vinogradov, Alexander, Wacera, Grace, Wang, Zhechen, Wibisono, Susilo, and Yeung, Victoria Wai‐Lan
- Abstract
There is a growing body of work suggesting that social class stereotypes are amplified when people perceive higher levels of economic inequality—that is, the wealthy are perceived as more competent and assertive and the poor as more incompetent and unassertive. The present study tested this prediction in 32 societies and also examines the role of wealth-based categorization in explaining this relationship. We found that people who perceived higher economic inequality were indeed more likely to consider wealth as a meaningful basis for categorization. Unexpectedly, however, higher levels of perceived inequality were associated with perceiving the wealthy as less competent and assertive and the poor as more competent and assertive. Unpacking this further, exploratory analyses showed that the observed tendency to stereotype the wealthy negatively only emerged in societies with lower social mobility and democracy and higher corruption. This points to the importance of understanding how socio-structural features that co-occur with economic inequality may shape perceptions of the wealthy and the poor.
- Published
- 2023
3. A 32‐society investigation of the influence of perceived economic inequality on social class stereotyping
- Author
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Tanjitpiyanond, Porntida, primary, Jetten, Jolanda, additional, Peters, Kim, additional, Ashokkumar, Ashwini, additional, Barry, Oumar, additional, Billet, Matthew, additional, Becker, Maja, additional, Booth, Robert W., additional, Castro, Diego, additional, Chinchilla, Juana, additional, Costantini, Giulio, additional, Dejonckheere, Egon, additional, Dimdins, Girts, additional, Erbas, Yasemin, additional, Espinosa, Agustín, additional, Finchilescu, Gillian, additional, Gómez, Ángel, additional, González, Roberto, additional, Goto, Nobuhiko, additional, Hatano, Aya, additional, Hartwich, Lea, additional, Jarukasemthawee, Somboon, additional, Karunagharan, Jaya Kumar, additional, Novak, Lindsay M., additional, Kim, Jinseok P., additional, Kohút, Michal, additional, Liu, Yi, additional, Loughnan, Steve, additional, Onyishi, Ike E., additional, Onyishi, Charity N., additional, Varela, Micaela, additional, Pattara‐angkoon, Iris S., additional, Peker, Müjde, additional, Pisitsungkagarn, Kullaya, additional, Rizwan, Muhammad, additional, Suh, Eunkook M., additional, Swann, William, additional, Tong, Eddie M. W., additional, Turner, Rhiannon N., additional, Vanhasbroeck, Niels, additional, Van Lange, Paul A. M., additional, Vauclair, Christin‐Melanie, additional, Vinogradov, Alexander, additional, Wacera, Grace, additional, Wang, Zhechen, additional, Wibisono, Susilo, additional, and Yeung, Victoria Wai‐Lan, additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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4. The Effect of National Identification Salience on Interpretations of the Civil Rights Movement
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Saud, Lina, Bilali, Rezarta, Freel, Samuel, and Varela, Micaela
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FOS: Psychology ,Social Psychology ,Psychology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences - Abstract
This research seeks to examine the effect of national identification on perceptions of the Civil Rights Movement with potential implications on support for modern-day collective action. We will manipulate national identification salience to examine its effect on interpretations of the Civil Rights Movement, as well as support for social change and collective action.
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- 2022
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5. Supplementary_Materials_7 - The Role of Family in the Intergenerational Transmission of Collective Action
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González, Roberto, Alvarez, Belén, Manzi, Jorge, Varela, Micaela, Cristián Frigolett, Livingstone, Andrew G., Louis, Winnifred, Carvacho, Héctor, Castro, Diego, Cheyre, Manuel, Cornejo, Marcela, Jiménez-Moya, Gloria, Rocha, Carolina, and Valdenegro, Daniel
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FOS: Psychology ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified - Abstract
Supplementary_Materials_7 for The Role of Family in the Intergenerational Transmission of Collective Action by Roberto González, Belén Alvarez, Jorge Manzi, Micaela Varela, Cristián Frigolett, Andrew G. Livingstone, Winnifred Louis, Héctor Carvacho, Diego Castro, Manuel Cheyre, Marcela Cornejo, Gloria Jiménez-Moya, Carolina Rocha and Daniel Valdenegro in Social Psychological and Personality Science
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- 2020
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6. The intergenerational transmission of participation in collective action: The role of conversation and political practices in the family
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Cornejo, Marcela, primary, Rocha, Carolina, additional, Castro, Diego, additional, Varela, Micaela, additional, Manzi, Jorge, additional, González, Roberto, additional, Jiménez‐Moya, Gloria, additional, Carvacho, Héctor, additional, Álvarez, Belén, additional, Valdenegro, Daniel, additional, Cheyre, Manuel, additional, and Livingstone, Andrew G., additional
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- 2020
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7. The Role of Family in the Intergenerational Transmission of Collective Action
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González, Roberto, primary, Alvarez, Belén, additional, Manzi, Jorge, additional, Varela, Micaela, additional, Frigolett, Cristián, additional, Livingstone, Andrew G., additional, Louis, Winnifred, additional, Carvacho, Héctor, additional, Castro, Diego, additional, Cheyre, Manuel, additional, Cornejo, Marcela, additional, Jiménez-Moya, Gloria, additional, Rocha, Carolina, additional, and Valdenegro, Daniel, additional
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- 2020
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8. Representations of history and present-day intergroup relations between indigenous and non-indigenous people: the Mapuche in Chile
- Author
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Figueiredo, Ana, Rocha, Carolina, Ferreiro, Trinidad, Guerrero, Catarina, Varela, Micaela, Montagna, Pietro, Garcia, Bernardita, Muñoz, Loreto, Schmid, Magdalena, Cornejo, Marcela, Licata, Laurent, Figueiredo, Ana, Rocha, Carolina, Ferreiro, Trinidad, Guerrero, Catarina, Varela, Micaela, Montagna, Pietro, Garcia, Bernardita, Muñoz, Loreto, Schmid, Magdalena, Cornejo, Marcela, and Licata, Laurent
- Abstract
Intergroup relations do no occur in a vacuum - they emerge within specific historical and socio-political contexts that shape perceptions and interactions between distinct social groups. For this reason, analyzing the connections between representations of the historical past and present-day intergroup relations is of utmost importance to understand current processes of social conflict and discrimination, as well as identity dynamics. In this chapter, we present the findings of 28 semi-structured interviews with Mapuche participants, which aimed to analyze their representations of the historical past and perceptions of the past and present-day intergroup relations between the Mapuche indigenous group and non-indigenous people in Chile. Results indicate that, for the Mapuche, representations of history serve the purpose of connecting past and present, by highlighting a narrative that stresses territorial loss across time. Moreover, current intergroup relations are perceived and evaluated through a focus on historical processes that shaped their current disadvantaged situation within Chilean society and led to the erosion of their cultural practices and social identity. Moreover, a majority of participants emphasize the need for reparative actions, in terms of territorial restitution and identity recognition. These results are discussed in terms of their implications for majority-minority intergroup relations following historical misdeeds., info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2019
9. The intergenerational transmission of participation in collective action: The role of conversation and political practices in the family.
- Author
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Cornejo, Marcela, Rocha, Carolina, Castro, Diego, Varela, Micaela, Manzi, Jorge, González, Roberto, Jiménez‐Moya, Gloria, Carvacho, Héctor, Álvarez, Belén, Valdenegro, Daniel, Cheyre, Manuel, and Livingstone, Andrew G.
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COLLECTIVE bargaining ,CONVERSATION ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,PARENT-child relationships ,POLITICAL participation ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,FAMILY relations ,QUANTITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
In this study, we examined the intergenerational transmission of collective action from parents to children. Using a mixed‐method approach combining quantitative and qualitative analysis, we analysed data from 100 dyads of activist parents in Chile (involved in the mobilizations against the dictatorship during the 1980s) and their adult children (N = 200). The quantitative analysis addressed the role of conversations about politics in the family. The results provided evidence of a direct association between those conversations and the frequency of participation in conventional and radical actions by the children, and an indirect association via children's knowledge about parental involvement in past social movements. The qualitative phase, which used interviews and thematic analysis on a subsample of 24 dyads (N = 48), confirmed the role of political conversations, but also revealed the influence of other factors such as cultural consumption and joint political participation. This phase allowed the identification of factors that facilitate or hinder family transmission. Overall, the study highlights the relevance of family as a critical site of socialization that enables the intergenerational transmission of protest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. The Role of Family in the Intergenerational Transmission of Collective Action
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González, Roberto, Alvarez, Belén, Manzi, Jorge, Varela, Micaela, Frigolett, Cristián, Livingstone, Andrew G., Louis, Winnifred, Carvacho, Héctor, Castro, Diego, Cheyre, Manuel, Cornejo, Marcela, Jiménez-Moya, Gloria, Rocha, Carolina, and Valdenegro, Daniel
- Abstract
The present research demonstrates intergenerational influences on collective action participation, whereby parents’ past and current participation in collective action (descriptive family norms) shape their children’s participation in conventional and radical collective action via injunctive family norms (perception that parents value such participation). Two unique data sets were used: dyads of activist parents and their adult children (Study 1, N= 100 dyads) and student activists who participated in a yearlong, three-wave longitudinal study (Study 2, Ns wave 1 = 1,221, Wave 2 = 960, and Wave 3 = 917). Parents’ past and current participation directly and indirectly predicted children’s protest participation in Study 1, while Study 2 showed a similar pattern longitudinally: Perceptions of parents’ participation (descriptive family norm) and approval (injunctive family norm) predicted change in collective action participation over time. Together, results highlight family environment as a critical setting for the intergenerational transmission of protest.
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- 2021
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11. Análisis de la cobertura mediática de los refugiados Entre las costas de El País y The Daily Telegraph
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Varela, Micaela, Casero-Ripolles, Andreu, and Universitat Jaume I. Departament de Ciències de la Comunicació
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Grado en Periodismo ,tratamiento de los refugiados ,Bachelor's Degree in Journalism ,El País ,prensa británica ,Grau en Periodisme ,prensa española ,The Daily Telegraph - Abstract
Treball Final de Grau en Periodisme. Codi: PE0932. Curs acadèmic: 2015/2016 There always have been refugees. The movements of groups, since Prehistory, have been changing, as the reason of their movements. Besides, there is always have been a political sight, a social one and an international view of a refugee crisis. However, the vision of the main characters, if they are taking into account, is smaller because of the media meet the demand of a western interests. The last big shift of people appeared in our newspapers and tv news in an explicit and continuous way from August 2015. Since then, this refugee crisis experienced changes –and still it does– as different stages: arrival, stay and expulsion. In the same way, the information flow has experienced changes too. Our Project study that changes on two newspapers, El País and The Daily Telegraph. In the first stage, the spotlight is deeper than the others, offering us a coverage that maybe could fill up the readers and spectators. In the second one, the interest is keeping, but the media highlight those news which cause a big scoop in the public. The third stage only will highlight the moment when it produces the expulsions. This Project does a qualitative analysis of the sources and social actor and other quantitative analysis of the news. Our aim is to examine how the media treat the refugees in their news, the lexical they use, the sources, the identity they made of them and the way they arrive to the western public, who is consumer of the news media.
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- 2016
12. LA BRAVURA DE LAS MADRES MEXICANAS: Les mères courage mexicaines.
- Author
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VARELA, MICAELA
- Published
- 2021
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