articleJournal of Personality and Social PsychologyApr 18, 2011Closed access

Explaining radical group behavior: Developing emotion and efficacy routes to normative and nonnormative collective action.

University of St Andrews · Philipps University of Marburg · +3 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

A recent model of collective action distinguishes 2 distinct pathways: an emotional pathway whereby anger in response to injustice motivates action and an efficacy pathway where the belief that issues can be solved collectively increases the likelihood that group members take action (van Zomeren, Spears, Fischer, & Leach, 2004). Research supporting this model has, however, focused entirely on relatively normative actions such as participating in demonstrations. We argue that the relations between emotions, efficacy, and action differ for more extreme, nonnormative actions and propose (a) that nonnormative actions are often driven by a sense of low efficacy and (b) that contempt, which, unlike anger, entails…

Citation impact

744
total citations
FWCI
70.02
Percentile
100%
References
123
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Normative
  • Psychology
  • Contempt
  • Social psychology
  • Anger
  • Action (physics)
  • Collective action
  • Normative social influence
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
No related works found for this paper.

Funding