| Title: |
Social Dominance in Context and in Individuals. Contextual Moderation of Robust Effects of Social Dominance Orientation in 15 Languages and 20 Countries |
| Authors: |
Felicia Pratto; Atilla Çidama; Andrew L. Stewart; Fouad Bou Zeineddine; María Aranda; Antonio Aiello; Xenia Chryssochoou; Aleksandra Cichocka; Christopher Cohrs; Kevin Durrheim; Véronique Eicher; Rob Foels; Paulina Górska; I. Ching Lee; Laurent Licata; Liu Li; James H. Liu; Davide Morselli; Ines Meyer; Orla Muldoon; Hamdi Muluk; Nebojsa Petrovic; Stamos Papastamou; Igor Petrovic; Gerasimos Prodromitis; Rim Saab; Jacquelien van Stekelenburg; Joseph Sweetman; Wenwen Zheng; Kristen E. Henkel; PRATI, FRANCESCA; RUBINI, MONICA |
| Contributors: |
Felicia Pratto; Atilla Çidama; Andrew L. Stewart; Fouad Bou Zeineddine; María Aranda; Antonio Aiello; Xenia Chryssochoou; Aleksandra Cichocka; Christopher Cohr; Kevin Durrheim; Véronique Eicher; Rob Foel; Paulina Górska; I-Ching Lee; Laurent Licata; Liu Li; James H. Liu; Davide Morselli; Ines Meyer; Orla Muldoon; Hamdi Muluk; Nebojsa Petrovic; Francesca Prati; Stamos Papastamou; Igor Petrovic; Gerasimos Prodromiti; Monica Rubini; Rim Saab; Jacquelien van Stekelenburg; Joseph Sweetman; Wenwen Zheng; Kristen E. Henkel |
| Source: |
ftunibolognairis |
| Publication Year: |
2013 |
| Subject Terms: |
Social attitude; Prejudice; Cross-cultural; Social dominance orientation; psy; hisphilso |
| Description: |
We tested the internal reliability and predictive validity of a new 4-item Short Social Dominance Orientation (SSDO) scale among adults in 20 countries, using 15 languages (N = 2,130). Low scores indicate preferring group inclusion and equality to dominance. As expected, cross-nationally, the lower people were on SSDO, the more they endorsed more women in leadership positions, protecting minorities, and aid to the poor. Multilevel moderation models showed that each effect was stronger in nations where a relevant kind of group power differentiation was more salient. Distributions of SSDO were positively skewed, despite use of an extended response scale; results show rejecting group hierarchy is normative. The short scale is effective. Challenges regarding translations, use of short scales, and intersections between individual and collective levels in social dominance theory are discussed. |
| Document Type: |
article in journal/newspaper |
| Language: |
English |
| Relation: |
http://hdl.handle.net/11585/153663 |
| Availability: |
http://hdl.handle.net/11585/153663 |
| Rights: |
undefined |
| Accession Number: |
edsbas.496305EB |
| Database: |
BASE |