The Source Model of Group Threat: Responding to internal and external threats

Date

2019

Authors

Greenaway, Katharine
Cruwys, Tegan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Abstract

We introduce a model of group threat that articulates the opposing effects of intergroup (between-groups) and intragroup (within-group) threat on identity processes and group relations. The source model of group threat argues that the perceived source of a threat is critical in predicting its consequences, such that perceptions of intergroup threat will strengthen (in)group identity processes and relations, whereas perceptions of intragroup threat has the potential to undermine the same. In addition to reviewing the large literature on intergroup threat and a smaller body of unsynthesized work on intragroup threat, we discuss how these processes are captured in representations of monsters (aliens, vampires, and zombies) in popular media and how these ideas can inform interpretation of current political debates, such as those around homegrown terrorism. This model provides a novel summary of the core effects of intergroup and intragroup threat, generating testable hypotheses about the psychological effects of different types of threat. Applying this model will help to make sense of seemingly contradictory findings in the literature, illustrating how appraisal of a threat as originating from an intergroup or intragroup source has the capacity to change the group-based effects of that threat. (PsycINFO Database Record

Description

Keywords

social identity, group threat, intergroup, intragroup, group processes

Citation

Greenaway, K. H., & Cruwys, T. (2019). The source model of group threat: Responding to internal and external threats. American Psychologist, 74(2), 218–231. https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0000321

Source

American Psychologist

Type

Journal article

Book Title

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Access Statement

Open Access

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Restricted until

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