Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths

Past research has yet to explore the associations between personal relative deprivation with both youths’ civic engagement attitude and their participatory behaviours in civic engagement activities in a single study. The current study proposed that perceived discrimination by society would med...

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Main Author: Lim, Yi Xuan
Other Authors: Wan Ching
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/167888
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1678882023-05-28T15:31:44Z Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths Lim, Yi Xuan Wan Ching School of Social Sciences WanChing@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology Past research has yet to explore the associations between personal relative deprivation with both youths’ civic engagement attitude and their participatory behaviours in civic engagement activities in a single study. The current study proposed that perceived discrimination by society would mediate the relationship between youths’ personal relative deprivation and their civic engagement (i.e., both attitude and participation). 120 Singaporean Chinese undergraduates completed an online survey that focused on assessing their self-reported personal relative deprivation, perceived discrimination by society, civic engagement attitude, offline and online civic engagement participation. After mediation analysis, results revealed that the relationship between youths’ personal relative deprivation and their civic engagement (i.e., attitude and participation) failed to be mediated by their perception of being discriminated by society. The only significant correlations found were between perceived discrimination by society and two subscales of civic engagement attitude, after controlling for personal relative deprivation and the effects of subjective socioeconomic status. Despite the failed mediation results, these findings have theoretical implications to existing literature. More research on the relationship between personal relative deprivation and civic engagement (i.e., attitude, offline and online participation) would be essential in future studies to determine if these variables will be indirectly or directly associated. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2023-05-24T04:39:10Z 2023-05-24T04:39:10Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Lim, Y. X. (2023). Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/167888 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/167888 en PSY-IRB-2022-017 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology
Lim, Yi Xuan
Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
description Past research has yet to explore the associations between personal relative deprivation with both youths’ civic engagement attitude and their participatory behaviours in civic engagement activities in a single study. The current study proposed that perceived discrimination by society would mediate the relationship between youths’ personal relative deprivation and their civic engagement (i.e., both attitude and participation). 120 Singaporean Chinese undergraduates completed an online survey that focused on assessing their self-reported personal relative deprivation, perceived discrimination by society, civic engagement attitude, offline and online civic engagement participation. After mediation analysis, results revealed that the relationship between youths’ personal relative deprivation and their civic engagement (i.e., attitude and participation) failed to be mediated by their perception of being discriminated by society. The only significant correlations found were between perceived discrimination by society and two subscales of civic engagement attitude, after controlling for personal relative deprivation and the effects of subjective socioeconomic status. Despite the failed mediation results, these findings have theoretical implications to existing literature. More research on the relationship between personal relative deprivation and civic engagement (i.e., attitude, offline and online participation) would be essential in future studies to determine if these variables will be indirectly or directly associated.
author2 Wan Ching
author_facet Wan Ching
Lim, Yi Xuan
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Yi Xuan
author_sort Lim, Yi Xuan
title Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
title_short Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
title_full Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
title_fullStr Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
title_full_unstemmed Perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of Singaporean youths
title_sort perceived discrimination by society as mediator: relative deprivation and civic engagement of singaporean youths
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/167888
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