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Intergroup Relations
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Intergroup Relations

Four Volume Set
Edited by:


April 2014 | 1 400 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd

One of the most globally recognised sub-disciplines of social psychology is the field of intergroup relations, which has a strong relationship with both sociology and political science given its preponderance with themes such as prejudice, discrimination, multiculturalism and the relationship between social groups.

This new four-volume major work presents a comprehensive and authoritative collection of both classic and contemporary readings in intergroup relations. Each volume is opened by an introductory chapter which provides the reader with an overview of the primary topics covered therein, and the rationale behind the editor’s selection. Whilst the volumes are organized around the broad research themes of intergroup relations, the papers are carefully structured so that together they tell the story of how intergroup relations research has evolved within social psychology.

Volume One: Cognitive Processes
Volume Two: Motivation and Ideology
Volume Three: Emotion, Neuroscience and Evolution

Volume Four: Improving Intergroup Relations

 
Volume 1 – Cognitive Processes
Implicit Intergroup Bias

 
Arthur Staats & Carolyn Staats
Attitudes established by classical conditioning
Charles Perdue, John Dovidio, Michael Gurtman & Richard Tyler
Us and them: social categorization and the process of intergroup bias
Anthony Greenwald, Debbie McGhee & Jordan Schwartz
Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test
Laurie Rudman & Richard Ashmore
Discrimination and the implicit association test
Anne Maass et al.
Language use in intergroup contexts: The linguistic intergroup bias
Stereotyping and Intergroup Relations

 
Edward Jones, George Wood & George Quattrone
Perceived variability of personal characteristics in ingroups and outgroups: The role of knowledge and evaluation
Bernadette Park & Myron Rothbart
Perceptions of out-group homogeneity and levels of social categorization: Memory for the subordinate attributes of in-group and out-group members
Bernd Simon & Rupert Brown
Perceived intragroup homogeneity in minority–majority contexts
Mere categorization

 
Henri Tajfel et al.
Social categorization and intergroup behaviour
Shelley Taylor et al.
Categorical and contextual bases of person memory and stereotyping
Marilynn Brewer
Ingroup bias and the minimal group paradigm: A cognitive-motivational analysis
Depersonalization and Projection

 
John Turner et al.
Self and collective: Cognition and social context
Jordan Robbins & Joachim Krueger
Social projection to ingroups and outgroups: A review and meta-analysis
Michael Wenzel, Amelie Mummendey, Ulrike Weber & Sven Waldzus
The ingroup as pars pro toto: Projection from the ingroup onto the inclusive category as a precursor to social discrimination
Multiple Categorization

 
Richard Crisp & Miles Hewstone
Differential evaluation of crossed category groups: Patterns, processes, and reducing intergroup bias
 
Volume 2 – Motivations and Ideology
Self-esteem

 
Mark Rubin & Miles Hewstone
Social identity theory's self-esteem hypothesis: A review and some suggestions for clarification
Distinctiveness

 
Marilynn Brewer
The social self: On being the same and different at the same time
Russell Spears, Bertjan Doosje & Naomi Ellemers
Self-stereotyping in the face of threats to group status and distinctiveness: The role of group identification
Richard Crisp & Sarah Beck
Reducing intergroup bias: The moderating role of ingroup identification
Subjective Group Dynamics

 
Dominic Abrams et al.
Anti-norm and pro-norm deviance in the bank and on the campus: Two experiments on subjective group dynamics
Uncertainty

 
Paul Grieve & Michael Hogg
Subjective uncertainty and intergroup discrimination in the minimal group situation
Existential Threat

 
Jeff Greenberg et al.
Evidence for terror management theory II: The effects of mortality salience on reactions to those who threaten or bolster the cultural worldview
Emanuele Castano et al.
I belong therefore I exist: Ingroup identification, ingroup entitativity, and ingroup bias
Ideology

 
Shana Levin et al.
Social dominance orientation and intergroup bias: The legitimation of favoritism for high-status groups
John Jost & Orsoly Hunyady
Antecedents and consequences of system-justifying ideologies.
Aaron Kay et al.
Inequality, Discrimination, and the Power of the Status Quo: Direct Evidence for a Motivation to See the Way Things Are as the Way They Should Be
Multiculturalism

 
Christopher Wolsko, Bernadette Park, Charles Judd & Bernd Wittenbrink
Framing interethnic ideology: Effects of multicultural and colorblind perspectives on judgments of groups and individuals
Carey Ryan et al.
Multicultural and colorblind ideology, stereotypes, and ethno-centrism among Black and White Americans
Multiple Identities

 
Marilynn Brewer & Kathleen Pierce
Social identity complexity and outgroup tolerance.
 
Volume 3 – Emotion, Biology and Evolution
Intergroup Emotions

 
Angela Maitner, Diane Mackie & Eliot Smith
Antecedents and consequences of satisfaction and guilt following ingroup aggression
Richard Crisp et al.
Seeing red or feeling blue: Differentiated intergroup emotions and ingroup identification in soccer fans
Infrahumanization

 
Maria-Paola Paladino et al.
Differential association of uniquely and non uniquely human emotions with the ingroup and the outgroup
Amy Cuddy, Mindi Rock and Michael
Aid in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina: Inferences of secondary emotions and intergroup helping
Tania Tam et al.
The Impact of Intergroup Emotions on Forgiveness in Northern Ireland
Neuroscience

 
Elizabeth Phelps et al.
Performance on indirect measures of race evaluation predicts amygdala activity
Lasana Harris & Susan Fiske
Dehumanizing the lowest of the low: Neuroimaging responses to extreme out-groups
Evolution

 
Robert Kurzban, John Tooby & Leda Cosmides
Can race be erased? Coalitional computation and social categorization
Mark Van Vugt, David De Cremer, & Dirk Janssen
Gender differences in competition and cooperation: The male warrior hypothesis
Carlos David Navarrete et al.
Fear extinction to an out-group face: The role of target gender
Jason Faulkner et al.
Evolved disease-avoidance mechanisms and contemporary xenophobic attitudes
Gordon Hodson & Kimberly Costello
Interpersonal disgust, ideological orientations, and dehumanization as predictors of intergroup attitudes
C. David Navarrete et al.
Anxiety and Intergroup Bias: Terror Management or Coalitional Psychology?
 
Volume 4 – Improving Intergroup Relations
Contact

 
Thomas Pettigrew
Generalized intergroup contact effects on prejudice
Mir Rabiul Islam & Miles Hewstone
Dimensions of Contact as Predictors of Intergroup Anxiety, Perceived Out-Group Variability, and Out-Group Attitude: An Integrative Model
Gordon Hodson
Do ideologically intolerant people benefit from intergroup contact?
Fiona Kate Barlow et al.
The contact caveat: Negative contact predicts increased prejudice more than positive contact predicts reduced prejudice
Shana Levin, Colette van Laar & Jim Sidanius
The effects of ingroup and outgroup friendships on ethnic attitudes in college: A longitudinal study
Extended Contact

 
Stefania Paolini et al.
Effects of direct and indirect cross-group friendships on judgments of catholics and protestants in Northern Ireland: The mediating role of an anxiety-reduction mechanism
Recategorization

 
Samuel Gaertner et al.
Reducing intergroup bias: The benefits of recategorization
Jason Nier et al.
Changing interracial evaluations and behavior: The benefits of a common ingroup identity
Anja Eller & Dominic Abrams
“Gringos” in Mexico: Cross-sectional and longitudinal effects of language school-promoted contact on intergroup bias
Matthew Hornsey & Michael Hogg
Subgroup relations: A comparison of mutual intergroup differentiation and common ingroup identity models of prejudice reduction
Richard Crisp, Catriona Stone & Natalie Hall
Recategorization and subgroup identification: Predicting and preventing threats from common ingroups
Yuen Huo et al.
Superordinate identification, subgroup identification, and justice concerns: Is separatism the problem? Is assimilation the answer?
Cognitive Interventions

 
Adam Galinsky & Gillian Ku
The effects of perspective-taking on prejudice: The moderating role of self-evaluation
Rhiannon Turner, Richard Crisp & Emily Lambert
Imagining intergroup contact can improve intergroup attitudes
Loris Vezzali et al.
Improving explicit and implicit intergroup attitudes using imagined contact: An experimental intervention with elementary school children
Jake Harwood et al.
Secondary transfer effects from imagined contact: Group similarity affects the generalization gradient

"This compendium of “must read” research papers in intergroup relations has been put together by one of the field’s leading experts. It has been carefully organized into a series of integrative volumes and sections that address intergroup relations from a variety of distinct but complementary perspectives. This is an essential resource for students in the area."

Mark Rubin
The University of Newcastle, Australia

"One of the key challenges to social psychologists is to understand, explain, and promote intergroup relations. This 4-volume compilation of 58 articles--both classic and contemporary--will enable graduate students and scholars to have an overview of the empirical and theoretical advances in the field. Professor Crisp has done a superb job of selecting the most appropriate pieces that accurately reflect how the field of intergroup relations has been growing since 1958."

Ramadhar Singh, Ph.D. (Purdue)
Distinguished Professor of Management, Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore

In this compendium of major works on Intergroup Relations, Richard J. Crisp, a leading social psychologist, expertly introduces classic and current papers that have theoretically and empirically contributed to the study of intergroup relations - focusing on cognitive processes, motivations, ideology, emotion, biology, evolution and the improvement of intergroup relations. This four-volume set will help readers enjoy the wonderful landscape of this area of social psychology.

Tomohiro Kumagai
Otsuma Women’s University, Tokyo, Japan.