Association Between Secessionist Tendencies And Perceived Intragroup Conflict: Implications Of Adherence To Regionalist And Essentialist Beliefs

Claudia Estrada, Dafne Espinoza, Roberto Vasquez, Vincent Yzerbyt

INNOVATION-THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH(2021)

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Abstract
Being part of an ingroup in order to form a new class, and perceived conflict within the original affiliation. The working hypothesis is that there is a positive correlation between these variables. Two hundred and twenty-four volunteer participants responded to five questionnaires that measured the main variables of this study and supplied feedback through other questionnaires related to social identity: regionalism (a form of ethnocentrism), group identification, and essentialism. The main results indicate that secessionism is positively associated with the perception of conflict between the ingroup and the superordinate ingroup, and that both variables in turn correlate with the other variables studied. The results are discussed in terms of the possible causal determination between the variables drawn from the aforementioned empirical evidence and the supporting theory.
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Key words
group differences, group identity, reference group, secessionism, regionalism, conflict, essentialism
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