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Black and white photo of Hanna Bäck. Photo.

Hanna Bäck

Professor

Black and white photo of Hanna Bäck. Photo.

Exploring a pathway to radicalization : The effects of social exclusion and rejection sensitivity

Author

  • Emma A. Renström
  • Hanna Bäck
  • Holly M. Knapton

Summary, in English

This article aims to explore if social exclusion can constitute a pathway to radicalization, and if individual level of sensitivity of rejection moderates the effect of social exclusion. Humans innately seek belonging and meaning, and strive for re-establishing a sense of value and belongingness if faced with social exclusion. One way to achieve this is by adherence to a new and inviting group. In four studies, we test to what extent individuals who face social exclusion adapt to a radical including group. In Studies 1 (n = 104) and 2 (n = 308), we use a social media-like paradigm to manipulate social exclusion. In Study 3 (n = 1041), we use the so-called Cyberball paradigm, and in Study 4 (n = 40) we use a real-life manipulation. All studies show that rejected individuals who are sensitive to rejection are more prone to identify with, engage with and endorse an extreme group. The results hold over both ideological (Studies 1–3) and non-ideological (Study 4) content. Only the last study showed a main effect of social exclusion. We discuss the results in reference to the significance loss model of radicalization.

Department/s

  • Department of Political Science
  • Department of Psychology

Publishing year

2020

Language

English

Pages

1204-1229

Publication/Series

Group Processes and Intergroup Relations

Volume

23

Issue

8

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Topic

  • Psychology
  • Political Science

Keywords

  • experiment
  • radicalization
  • rejection sensitivity
  • social exclusion

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1368-4302