Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help

Decisions to give and receive help are often influenced by group memberships, social identities, and intergroup relations. Two studies were conducted to test how perceived political relations between countries are related to willingness to accept offers of intergroup help. Respondents in two low-inc...

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Main Authors: Zagefka, Hanna, Dela Paz, Erwine, Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth, Ghazal, Saima, Bilgen, Emine, Cheso, Diana
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2023
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/428
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/psychology-faculty-pubs/article/1428/viewcontent/J_Applied_Social_Pyschol___2023___Zagefka___Fearing_the_Trojan_horse__Motives_attributed_to_the_outgroup_and_rejection_of.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.psychology-faculty-pubs-14282024-03-07T07:19:23Z Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help Zagefka, Hanna Dela Paz, Erwine Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth Ghazal, Saima Bilgen, Emine Cheso, Diana Decisions to give and receive help are often influenced by group memberships, social identities, and intergroup relations. Two studies were conducted to test how perceived political relations between countries are related to willingness to accept offers of intergroup help. Respondents in two low-income countries, the Philippines (N = 289) and Pakistan (N = 275), indicated their willingness to accept (or not) Covid-19 vaccine donations from two higher-status countries (China and the United States) during the Covid pandemic. Results showed that the perceived motivation of the outgroup nation for providing help was associated with rejection or acceptance of help, mediated by emotional reactions to the help. A perception that outgroup nations donate vaccines to demonstrate and assert their superiority and power, that they donate vaccines to keep the outgroup dependent on the ingroup, and a perception that they donate vaccines out of self-interest, were all associated with rejection of vaccine donations. A perception that donations by the outgroup are motivated by genuine concern for the ingroup was associated with acceptance of help. Findings confirm that political intergroup relations are related to attitudes about whether the ingroup nation should accept intergroup help or not. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed. 2023-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/428 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/psychology-faculty-pubs/article/1428/viewcontent/J_Applied_Social_Pyschol___2023___Zagefka___Fearing_the_Trojan_horse__Motives_attributed_to_the_outgroup_and_rejection_of.pdf Psychology Department Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Psychology Social and Behavioral Sciences Social Psychology
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Social Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Social Psychology
Zagefka, Hanna
Dela Paz, Erwine
Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth
Ghazal, Saima
Bilgen, Emine
Cheso, Diana
Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
description Decisions to give and receive help are often influenced by group memberships, social identities, and intergroup relations. Two studies were conducted to test how perceived political relations between countries are related to willingness to accept offers of intergroup help. Respondents in two low-income countries, the Philippines (N = 289) and Pakistan (N = 275), indicated their willingness to accept (or not) Covid-19 vaccine donations from two higher-status countries (China and the United States) during the Covid pandemic. Results showed that the perceived motivation of the outgroup nation for providing help was associated with rejection or acceptance of help, mediated by emotional reactions to the help. A perception that outgroup nations donate vaccines to demonstrate and assert their superiority and power, that they donate vaccines to keep the outgroup dependent on the ingroup, and a perception that they donate vaccines out of self-interest, were all associated with rejection of vaccine donations. A perception that donations by the outgroup are motivated by genuine concern for the ingroup was associated with acceptance of help. Findings confirm that political intergroup relations are related to attitudes about whether the ingroup nation should accept intergroup help or not. Theoretical and applied implications are discussed.
format text
author Zagefka, Hanna
Dela Paz, Erwine
Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth
Ghazal, Saima
Bilgen, Emine
Cheso, Diana
author_facet Zagefka, Hanna
Dela Paz, Erwine
Macapagal, Ma. Elizabeth
Ghazal, Saima
Bilgen, Emine
Cheso, Diana
author_sort Zagefka, Hanna
title Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
title_short Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
title_full Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
title_fullStr Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
title_full_unstemmed Fearing the Trojan Horse: Motives Attributed to the Outgroup and Rejection of Outgroup Help
title_sort fearing the trojan horse: motives attributed to the outgroup and rejection of outgroup help
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2023
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/428
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/psychology-faculty-pubs/article/1428/viewcontent/J_Applied_Social_Pyschol___2023___Zagefka___Fearing_the_Trojan_horse__Motives_attributed_to_the_outgroup_and_rejection_of.pdf
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