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      The sigh of the oppressed: The palliative effects of ideology are stronger for people living in highly unequal neighbourhoods.

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          Abstract

          Ideologies that legitimize status hierarchies are associated with increased well-being. However, which ideologies have 'palliative effects', why they have these effects, and whether these effects extend to low-status groups remain unresolved issues. This study aimed to address these issues by testing the effects of the ideology of Symbolic Prejudice on well-being among low- and high-status ethnic groups (4,519 Europeans and 1,091 Māori) nested within 1,437 regions in New Zealand. Results showed that Symbolic Prejudice predicted increased well-being for both groups, but that this relationship was stronger for those living in highly unequal neighbourhoods. This suggests that it is precisely those who have the strongest need to justify inequality that accrue the most psychological benefit from subscribing to legitimizing ideologies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Soc Psychol
          The British journal of social psychology
          Wiley-Blackwell
          2044-8309
          0144-6665
          Sep 2017
          : 56
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Oxford, UK.
          [2 ] University of Auckland, New Zealand.
          Article
          10.1111/bjso.12192
          28303581
          b0fcefda-a13f-4041-8964-ed9b29953956
          History

          ideology,inequality,palliative effects,symbolic prejudice,wellbeing

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