The impact of national integration policies on prejudice and psychological well-being: The fundamental role of the clarity and coherence of integration policies

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_54DE7DC58C41
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The impact of national integration policies on prejudice and psychological well-being: The fundamental role of the clarity and coherence of integration policies
Journal
European Journal of Social Psychology
Author(s)
de la Sablonnière Roxane, Nugier Armelle, Kadhim Nada, Kleinlogel E. P., Pelletier-Dumas Mathieu, Guimond Serge
ISSN
0046-2772
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
50
Pages
614-633
Language
english
Abstract
Recent advances in social psychological research have shown that national integration policies influence how immigrants are perceived and treated by the mainstream population. However, the processes by which these policies come to have an impact on prejudice and well-being of the general population are largely unknown. Moreover, past research has often
relied on unrepresentative samples limiting generalizability. The present research proposes that when the national integration policies of a given society are perceived as clearly defined
and coherent, they have a direct impact on the perceived cultural norm related to those national integration policies. In turn, the perceived cultural norm affects personal attitudes
toward cultural norms (i.e., the degree to which individuals support a given policy), which influence the level of anti-immigrant prejudice as well as psychological well-being. Findings
from two correlational studies with representative samples of the mainstream population conducted in France on the policy of secularism (N = 940) and in Québec on the policy of
interculturalism (N = 912) supported the proposed theoretical model.
Keywords
national integration policies, interculturalism, secularism, personal attitudes, clarity, coherence, cultural norms, prejudice, well-being.
Create date
02/12/2019 12:39
Last modification date
15/07/2020 6:22
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