2016
Included but Invisible? Subtle Bias, Common Identity, and the Darker Side of “We”
Dovidio J, Gaertner S, Ufkes E, Saguy T, Pearson A. Included but Invisible? Subtle Bias, Common Identity, and the Darker Side of “We”. Social Issues And Policy Review 2016, 10: 6-46. DOI: 10.1111/sipr.12017.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSocial categorization processesIntergroup attitudesIntergroup biasRoots of biasCategorization processGroup membershipSubtle biasDarker SideWay peopleShared identityCommon identitySubtle natureMinority groupsBiasDifferent perspectivesSeparate groupsRecategorizationPotential consequencesBiasesDifferent preferencesIdentityAttitudesColorblindnessDiscriminationIntervention
2007
Another view of “we”: Majority and minority group perspectives on a common ingroup identity
Dovidio J, Gaertner S, Saguy T. Another view of “we”: Majority and minority group perspectives on a common ingroup identity. European Review Of Social Psychology 2007, 18: 296-330. DOI: 10.1080/10463280701726132.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCommon ingroup identity modelCommon ingroup identityMinority group perspectivesIntergroup biasesIngroup identityIntergroup interactionsIdentity modelSocial categorisationGroup perspectiveRecent researchDifferent preferencesMinority groupsPotential implicationsSocial changeRecategorisationPrejudiceDifferent formsBiasesResearchSelfIdentityPreferencesInitial formulationDiscriminationImplications