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Bridging the partisan divide: Self-affirmation reduces ideological closed-mindedness and inflexibility in negotiation
Authors:Cohen Geoffrey L  Sherman David K  Bastardi Anthony  Hsu Lillian  McGoey Michelle  Ross Lee
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of Colorado at Boulder, CO 80309-0345, USA. geoffrey.cohen@colorado.edu
Abstract:Three studies link resistance to probative information and intransigence in negotiation to concerns of identity maintenance. Each shows that affirmations of personal integrity (vs. nonaffirmation or threat) can reduce resistance and intransigence but that this effect occurs only when individuals' partisan identity and/or identity-related convictions are made salient. Affirmation made participants' assessment of a report critical of U.S. foreign policy less dependent on their political views, but only when the identity relevance of the issue rather than the goal of rationality was salient (Study 1). Affirmation increased concession making in a negotiation over abortion policy, but again this effect was moderated by identity salience (Studies 2 and 3). Indeed, although affirmed negotiators proved relatively more open to compromise when either the salience of their true convictions or the importance of remaining faithful to those convictions was heightened, the reverse was true when the salient goal was compromise. The theoretical and applied significance of these findings are discussed.
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