Results 111 to 120 of about 9,076 (240)
The study aims to investigate the impact of social media on consumer boycott behavior, focusing on how social media usage influences consumer intentions to participate in boycotts.
Khalid Mady +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Does Valuing Free Speech Affect Norms of Tolerance? Evidence From Individual Preferences
ABSTRACT Amid intensifying global debates over balancing free speech with protections against hate speech, this paper investigates whether individuals who value free speech exhibit greater racial tolerance. Unlike prior studies focusing on the institutional effects of free speech, this paper examines whether individuals who prioritize free speech hold ...
Claudia Williamson Kramer
wiley +1 more source
Depressive symptoms and populism: Evidence from European countries
Abstract In recent years, depression has entered the research agenda of political psychology, emerging as a meaningful psychological correlate of diverse political attitudes and behaviors. Surprisingly, however, its link to populism—the political phenomenon that has probably attracted most public and scholarly attention over the past several years—has ...
Nathalie Herren +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract What is the nature of affective partisan polarization? We answer this question in a preregistered laboratory study conducted in the United States measuring partisans' affective reactions to static images of US politicians with self‐reports and physiological indicators of valence and arousal.
Kevin Arceneaux, Bert N. Bakker
wiley +1 more source
Purpose: The aim of the research is to identify whether product country image influences consumption patterns and purchase decisions of Romanian consumers, as well as to identify stereotypes regarding foreign products.
Tana Cristina LICSANDRU +2 more
doaj
Abstract Communities worldwide face growing polarization, often fueled by misperceptions. Across three studies, we investigate the relationship between partisan news media exposure and meta‐(mis)perceptions (e.g., meta‐prejudice, meta‐dehumanization) in the United States and Israel.
Muhammad Ehab Rasul +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Deep Segregation: Informality, Trust and the Making of Discrimination in Markets
ABSTRACT This article advances the concept of deep segregation to theorise how social exclusion is produced through the everyday organisation of market access rather than through spatial separation alone. Deep segregation refers to a relational and processual form of segregation constituted through segmented routes of access, intermediary networks and ...
Mohsin Alam Bhat, Asaf Ali Lone
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Objective This study aimed to explore how Arab mothers in Israel perceive their intergenerational relationships with young adult daughters within the sociocultural context of Arab society and their intersecting marginalized positions as women and ethnic minority members.
Haneen Karram‐Elias
wiley +1 more source
The role of affinity and animosity on solidarity with Ukraine and hospitality outcomes
A. Josiassen +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source

