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Symbols and labels: Children’s awareness of social categories in a divided society
Author(s)
Date Issued
2020-07
Date Available
2020-11-11T13:19:01Z
Embargo end date
2021-03-16
Abstract
Aims: How and when children develop an understanding of group boundaries have implications for conflict resolution. When social divisions are not perceptually distinct, symbols become particularly important. Framed by Social Identity Development Theory, this study was designed to assess children’s categorization of symbols with conflict-related group labels. Method: In Northern Ireland, 218 children (M=8.14, SD = 1.83, range 5-11 years old) participated in a novel task designed for this study. The sample was evenly split by child gender and community background. Results: Children sorted symbols above chance with both the hypothesized national (i.e., British/Irish) and ethno-political (i.e., Protestant/Catholic) labels, showing a stronger association for the former. Sorting was also stronger for ingroup symbols, compared to outgroup symbols, and increased with age. Conclusion: These findings reflect the potential role that a divided social world has on the development of children’s understanding of conflict-related groups. The results also have implications for intergroup relations among children in divided societies.
Other Sponsorship
Queens University Belfast. School of Psychology
Northern Ireland Department for the Economy (DfE)
UKRI GCRF Global Impact Accelerator Awards (GIAA)
British Psychological Society (BPS). Social Psychology Section
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Journal of Community Psychology
Volume
48
Issue
5
Start Page
1512
End Page
1526
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 Wiley Periodicals
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0090-4392
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Taylor et al 2020 - PURE.docx
Size
60.14 KB
Format
Unknown
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d3ed4a673e0c1f9e51c42514b4356036
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