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" Global Citizenship and Respect: Increasing Intergroup Trust "
Janet Victoria Pauketat
Mackie, Diane M.
Document Type
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Latin Dissertation
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Language of Document
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English
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Record Number
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804665
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Doc. No
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TL49500
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Call number
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1937923331; 10599305
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Main Entry
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Rivard, Jared
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Title & Author
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Global Citizenship and Respect: Increasing Intergroup Trust\ Janet Victoria PauketatMackie, Diane M.
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College
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University of California, Santa Barbara
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Date
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2017
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Degree
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Ph.D.
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field of study
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Psychological and Brain Sciences
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student score
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2017
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Page No
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182
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Note
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Committee members: Collins, Nancy L.; Kim, Heejung S.; Sherman, David K.
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Note
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Place of publication: United States, Ann Arbor; ISBN=978-0-355-27119-5
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Abstract
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The studies in this dissertation examine intergroup trust as a positive intergroup outcome stemming from identity (global citizenship) and emotion (group-based respect and fear). Global citizenship involves global identification, global concern, global competence, and participation in the global community. Despite the fact that global citizenship might improve intergroup relations, little is known about its impact on intergroup outcomes. In four studies, intergroup trust is investigated as a function of global citizenship, group-based respect, and group-based fear. In Study 1, general population Americans completed a survey assessing global citizenship and intergroup trust. Higher levels of global citizenship predicted intergroup trust of dissimilar (Arab) but not similar (British) outgroups. In Study 2, general population Americans indicated their trust of, as well as respect and fear towards, the dissimilar and similar outgroups used in Study 1. Global citizenship predicted increased trust of both outgroups through group-based respect. In Study 3, American university students experimentally induced to identify as a global or national citizen played a trust game with a dissimilar or similar outgroup partner during induced positive, negative, or neutral emotional states. Only positive emotion increased behavioral trust. Self-reported global citizenship again predicted intergroup trust through group-based respect, replicating the theoretical model. In Study 4, a norm-based manipulation of global citizenship did not increase intergroup trust for general population Americans. However, the self-reported global citizenship-respect-trust model replicated. Overall, results suggest that global citizenship predicts intergroup trust through group-based respect. Implications for intergroup relations and global citizenship are discussed.
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Subject
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Social psychology
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Descriptor
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Psychology;Global citizenship;Group-based respect;Intergroup relations;Intergroup trust
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Added Entry
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Mackie, Diane M.
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Added Entry
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Psychological and Brain SciencesUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
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