In four studies (N = 1832 French participants), we tested if perceiving present society as disintegrated and disregulated (i.e. perceived anomie) would foster the projection of a negative national future and feelings of collective angst; which would in turn predict increased present intentions to engage in actions aimed at defending the country. Perceived anomie was measured (Pilot Study) or manipulated (Studies 1-3). In the Pilot study, we found that perceiving high disregulation in present society was associated with the evocation of distressing national futures (e.g. war/misery), stronger collective angst and greater support for action against outgroups (e.g. closing borders). Similarly, when anomie was made salient (vs. not), participants projected more negative French futures (Study 1), believed more that the situation of France will deteriorate in the future (Study 2) and reported stronger collective angst (both studies); which in turn predicted greater support/intentions to engage in different type of defensive collective action and especially anti-immigration actions (both studies). In Study 3, the effects were not significant despite descriptive patterns in the expected direction. Altogether, these results suggest that the way people think about the national future is shaped by their perceptions of the present and contributes to predict their current actions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12804 | DOI Listing |
J Pers Soc Psychol
December 2024
Department of Leadership and Management, Kuhne Logistics University.
Studies have shown that anomie, that is, the perception that a society's leadership and social fabric are breaking down, is a central predictor of individuals' support for authoritarianism. However, causal evidence for this relationship is missing. Moreover, previous studies are ambiguous regarding the mediating mechanism and lack empirical tests for the same.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Soc Psychol
January 2025
Laboratoire Parisien de Psychologie Sociale, Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis, Saint-Denis, France.
Behav Sci (Basel)
February 2024
South American Center for Education and Research in Public Health, Universidad Privada Norbert Wiener, Lima 15108, Peru.
The Perception of Anomie Scale (PAS) is a measure used to evaluate the state of society and whether it is disintegrated and deregulated. Although widely used, the psychometric properties of reliability, validity, and measurement invariance according to sex have not been studied in the Chilean university population. To explore these properties, a cross-sectional study was carried out with 383 students from public (45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPopulism is on the rise across liberal democracies. The sociopsychological underpinnings of this increasing endorsement of populist ideology should be uncovered. In an online cross-sectional survey study among adult samples from five countries (Chile, France, Italy, Romania, and the United Kingdom; = 9,105), we aimed to replicate an pattern in which relative deprivation and identity threat are associated with populism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMemory
February 2024
Laboratoire de Psychologie et Ergonomie Appliquées (UMR_T 7708), Université Paris Cité, Boulogne-Billancourt, France.
This research experimentally examined the crossed influences between the emotional valence of collective memory and collective future thinking. As remembering the past and imagining the future are shaped by the present, we additionally test whether perceived anomie (i.e.
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