Mapping Ethnic Stereotypes and Their Antecedents in Russia: The Stereotype Content Model

Frontiers in Psychology
Dmitry GrigoryevAnastasia Batkhina

Abstract

The stereotype content model (SCM), originating in the United States and generalized across nearly 50 countries, has yet to address ethnic relations in one of the world's most influential nations. Russia and the United States are somewhat alike (large, powerful, immigrant-receiving), but differ in other ways relevant to intergroup images (culture, religions, ideology, and history). Russian ethnic stereotypes are understudied, but significant for theoretical breadth and practical politics. This research tested the SCM on ethnic stereotypes in a Russian sample (N = 1115). Study 1 (N = 438) produced an SCM map of the sixty most numerous domestic ethnic groups (both ethnic minorities and immigrants). Four clusters occupied the SCM warmth-by-competence space. Study 2 (N = 677) compared approaches to ethnic stereotypes in terms of status and competition, cultural distance, perceived region, and four intergroup threats. Using the same Study 1 groups, the Russian SCM map showed correlated warmth and competence, with few ambivalent stereotypes. As the SCM predicts, status predicted competence, and competition negatively predicted warmth. Beyond the SCM, status and property threat both were robust antecedents for both competence and warm...Continue Reading

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Citations

Jan 17, 2020·International Journal of Psychology : Journal International De Psychologie·Eugene TartakovskyMarina Nikulina
Oct 31, 2020·Frontiers in Psychology·Andrej FindorLuca Váradi
Apr 4, 2021·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Zouhui JiQing-Wei Chen
Jun 18, 2021·Frontiers in Psychology·Nino JavakhishviliAnna Gogibedashvili

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Software Mentioned

R package qgraph

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