dc.contributorMayorga, Renée
dc.creatorDurante, Federica
dc.creatorFiske, Susan T.
dc.creatorKervyn, Nicolas
dc.creatorMayorga, Renée
dc.date.issued2013
dc.identifierDurante, F., Fiske, S. T., Kervyn, N., Cuddy, A. J., Akande, A. D., Adetoun, B. E., ... y Barlow, F. K. (2013). Nations' income inequality predicts ambivalence in stereotype content: How societies mind the gap. British Journal of Social Psychology, 52(4), 726-746. doi:10.1111/bjso.12005
dc.identifier0144-6665
dc.identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12724/2281
dc.identifierBritish Journal of Social Psychology
dc.identifier2044-8309
dc.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12005
dc.description.abstractIncome inequality undermines societies: The more inequality, the more health problems, social tensions, and the lower social mobility, trust, life expectancy. Given people's tendency to legitimate existing social arrangements, the stereotype content model (SCM) argues that ambivalence-perceiving many groups as either warm or competent, but not both-may help maintain socio-economic disparities. The association between stereotype ambivalence and income inequality in 37 cross-national samples from Europe, the Americas, Oceania, Asia, and Africa investigates how groups' overall warmth-competence, status-competence, and competition-warmth correlations vary across societies, and whether these variations associate with income inequality (Gini index). More unequal societies report more ambivalent stereotypes, whereas more equal ones dislike competitive groups and do not necessarily respect them as competent. Unequal societies may need ambivalence for system stability: Income inequality compensates groups with partially positive social images
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherWiley-Blackwell
dc.publisherGB
dc.relationurn:issn:2044-8309
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/pe/
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.sourceUniversidad de Lima
dc.sourceRepositorio Institucional Ulima
dc.subjectDesigualdad social
dc.subjectEquality
dc.titleNations' income inequality predicts ambivalence in stereotype content: How societies mind the gap
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article


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