Positive thinking elevates tolerance: experimental effects of happiness on adolescents’ attitudes toward asylum seekers
Positive thinking elevates tolerance: experimental effects of happiness on adolescents’ attitudes toward asylum seekers
Inducing emotional reactions toward social groups can influence individuals’ political tolerance. This study examines the influence of incidental fear and happiness on adolescents’ tolerant attitudes and feelings toward young Muslim asylum seekers. In our experiment, 219 16- to 21-year-olds completed measures of prejudicial attitudes. After being induced to feel happiness, fear, or no emotion (control), participants reported their tolerant attitudes and feelings toward asylum-seeking young people. Participants assigned to the happiness condition demonstrated more tolerant attitudes toward asylum-seeking young people than did those assigned to the fear or control conditions. Participants in the control condition did not differ from participants in the fear condition. The participants in the happiness condition also had more positive feelings toward asylum-seeking young people than did participants in the control condition. The findings suggest that one way to increase positive attitudes toward asylum-seeking young people is to improve general emotional state.
Adolescents, asylum seekers, attitudes, incidental emotions, social reasoning, tolerance
346-357
Tenenbaum, Harriet R.
56e2c357-2cb9-484c-bfe2-825080b11c8d
Capelos, Tereza
bd3b5744-cbcc-44a4-9b73-b088d82154e7
Lorimer, Jessica
fefab67a-4a6b-4c4d-99e9-ddf6435856ad
Stocks, Thomas
4715109d-45b6-49cf-b614-cc403d8f4d87
1 April 2018
Tenenbaum, Harriet R.
56e2c357-2cb9-484c-bfe2-825080b11c8d
Capelos, Tereza
bd3b5744-cbcc-44a4-9b73-b088d82154e7
Lorimer, Jessica
fefab67a-4a6b-4c4d-99e9-ddf6435856ad
Stocks, Thomas
4715109d-45b6-49cf-b614-cc403d8f4d87
Tenenbaum, Harriet R., Capelos, Tereza, Lorimer, Jessica and Stocks, Thomas
(2018)
Positive thinking elevates tolerance: experimental effects of happiness on adolescents’ attitudes toward asylum seekers.
Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 23 (2), .
(doi:10.1177/1359104518755217).
Abstract
Inducing emotional reactions toward social groups can influence individuals’ political tolerance. This study examines the influence of incidental fear and happiness on adolescents’ tolerant attitudes and feelings toward young Muslim asylum seekers. In our experiment, 219 16- to 21-year-olds completed measures of prejudicial attitudes. After being induced to feel happiness, fear, or no emotion (control), participants reported their tolerant attitudes and feelings toward asylum-seeking young people. Participants assigned to the happiness condition demonstrated more tolerant attitudes toward asylum-seeking young people than did those assigned to the fear or control conditions. Participants in the control condition did not differ from participants in the fear condition. The participants in the happiness condition also had more positive feelings toward asylum-seeking young people than did participants in the control condition. The findings suggest that one way to increase positive attitudes toward asylum-seeking young people is to improve general emotional state.
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 March 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 March 2018
Published date: 1 April 2018
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, © The Author(s) 2018.
Keywords:
Adolescents, asylum seekers, attitudes, incidental emotions, social reasoning, tolerance
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 482947
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482947
ISSN: 1359-1045
PURE UUID: 639a77f7-15d7-4afe-adfb-3df03c851b75
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Date deposited: 17 Oct 2023 16:55
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:15
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Contributors
Author:
Harriet R. Tenenbaum
Author:
Tereza Capelos
Author:
Jessica Lorimer
Author:
Thomas Stocks
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