Authority Relationship From a Societal Perspective: Social Representations of Obedience and Disobedience in Austrian Young Adults.
Clicks: 260
ID: 16406
2015
Obedience and disobedience have always been salient issues for both civil society and social psychologists. Since Milgram's first studies on destructive obedience there has not been a bottom-up definition of what obedience and disobedience mean. The current study aimed at investigating the social representations young adults use to define and to co-construct knowledge about obedience and disobedience in Austria. One hundred fifty four (106 females, 68.8%) Austrian young adults (Mean age = 22.9; SD = 3.5) completed a mixed-method questionnaire comprising open-ended questions and free word associations. Overall obedience and disobedience are respectively defined as conformity and non-conformity to regulations, ranging from implicit social norms to explicit formal laws. Authority is multi-faceted and has a central role in orienting obedience and disobedience. Further fundamental determinants of the authority relationship and relevant application of the results are discussed in this paper.
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Authors | Fattori, Francesco;Curly, Simone;Jörchel, Amrei C;Pozzi, Maura;Mihalits, Dominik;Alfieri, Sara; |
Journal | europe's journal of psychology |
Year | 2015 |
DOI | 10.5964/ejop.v11i2.883 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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