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Making and Unmaking Prejudice: Religious Affiliation Mitigates the Impact of Mortality Salience on Out‐Group Attitudes
Authors:Anna‐Kaisa Newheiser  Miles Hewstone  Alberto Voci  Katharina Schmid
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, University at AlbanyState University of New York;2. Department of Experimental PsychologyUniversity of Oxford;3. Department of Philosophy, Sociology, Education, and Applied PsychologyUniversity of Padova
Abstract:Research inspired by terror management theory has established that being reminded of the inevitability of death (i.e., “mortality salience”) leads people to express more negative attitudes toward out‐groups. We examined the hypothesis that being affiliated with a religion may buffer individuals against this negative impact of mortality salience. Two studies, conducted in two cultures that differ in their emphasis on religiosity (the United Kingdom and Italy), supported this hypothesis. Specifically, we found that mortality salience resulted in more negative out‐group attitudes only among participants not affiliated with any religion. Further, this buffering effect of religious affiliation was not moderated by participants’ specific religious orientations or by their levels of social dominance orientation. In addition, the buffering effect did not hold when prejudice against the target out‐group was not proscribed by religious authorities. Implications for research on religion, prejudice, and terror management are discussed.
Keywords:religious affiliation  religious orientation  mortality salience  out‐group attitudes  prejudice
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