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The conflict and integration between “Us” and “Them”:Major topics and frontiers in intergroup relations research |
LONG Feiteng1,2, LIU Guohua2, CAI Jianwen2, ZHANG Mengjia2 |
1 Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, Leiden 2333 AK, the Netherlands; 2 School of Business and Management, Shanghai International Studies University, Shanghai 200083 |
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Abstract A large body of the domestic literature on social psychology has focused on the intrapersonal and interpersonal processes of behavior. However, intergroup processes underlying social behavior receive relatively less attention. In order to adapt and develop the intergroup relations theories in China, it is necessary to critically think about and learn from the latest findings in intergroup relations research from the Western literature. The present study reviews the literature on intergroup relations indexed by SSCI and A&HCI between 2010 and 2019, aiming to offer understandings of the major topics and frontiers in recent intergroup literature. In order to extract major topics in intergroup relations research, literature clustering based on k-core theory is employed. The results show that seven major clusters of literature form the major topics in intergroup relations research; They are labelled as intergroup contact, outgroup dehumanization, positive responses, interpersonal process model, intergroup behavior, concrete construal, and social categories. The technique of burst detection is then employed to investigate keywords with citation bursts. Findings demonstrate that collective action, social network, and social norm represent the frontiers in intergroup relations research in the recent three years. Finally, prospective interdisciplinary integration with psychophysiology and social network analysis is discussed, and the present study suggests that the influence of social norm on intergroup relations need to be made clear.
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