Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Chayinska, M,Minescu, A,McGarty, C
2017
May
Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
Political solidarity through action (and inaction): How international relations changed intracultural perceptions in Ukraine
Published
()
Optional Fields
collective action disidentification political solidarity social identification SOCIAL IDENTITY MODEL COLLECTIVE ACTION GROUP MEMBERS DISADVANTAGED GROUP ACTIVISM INEQUALITY EXPRESSION DYNAMICS EFFICACY BEHAVIOR
20
396
408
The present research sought to explain the mechanisms behind rival Ukrainian solidarity campaigns advocating protection of the minority Crimean Tatars in the immediate aftermath of Russia's 2014 annexation of the Crimean peninsula. Adapting the social identity model of helping and solidarity we propose that political solidarity is a form of collective action in which allies can align their aspirational identities to the oppressed group's political loyalties through a process of disidentification from powerful outgroups. We proposed and found supportive evidence (N = 657) for the notion that both action (facilitation pathway) and inaction (inhibitory pathway) to support the Crimean Tatars were derived from disidentification from the European Union or the Russian-Federation-dominated Customs Union and are mediated by perception of the Crimean Tatars' loyalties towards Russia and Ukraine. The findings provide initial evidence for a new understanding of political mobilization in support of third parties as a group-level emergent phenomenon in the context of identity threat.
10.1177/1368430216682354
Grant Details