Identity‐reframing interventions: How to effectively highlight individuals' background‐specific strengths

Author:

Bauer Christina A.1ORCID,Walton Gregory2

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology University of Vienna Wien Austria

2. Faculty of Psychology Stanford University Palo Alto California USA

Abstract

AbstractMany low‐status groups are portrayed as deficient. Countering such stigmatizing narratives, identity‐reframing interventions reframe low‐status group members as strong and resourceful agents. This approach can help members of low‐status groups successfully pursue major life goals. In one test, an identity‐reframing intervention increased engagement in an online‐university among refugees by 23% over 1 year. In another, it increased the degree to which people with experiences of depression successfully completed a meaningful self‐chosen goal over 2 weeks. The present review describes how identity‐reframing interventions work on a practical and theoretical level, where they might not work, how they contribute to theory and practice, how they can be adapted to new populations and contexts, and what novel questions they direct us to.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference39 articles.

1. A status-enhancement account of overconfidence.

2. Resourceful Actors, Not Weak Victims: Reframing Refugees’ Stigmatized Identity Enhances Long-Term Academic Engagement

3. Bauer C. A. Job V. Walton G. M. &Stephens N. M.(2023).Representing low SES students as strong and agentic not deficient: An identity‐reframing intervention closes the SES achievement gap. Manuscript in Preparation.

4. Bauer C. A. &Walton G. M.(2023).Liberal paternalism: Weak‐victim narratives are common especially among liberals and facilitate the disempowering treatment of groups that face disadvantage. Manuscript under Review.

5. Bauer C. A. Walton G. M. Hoyer J. &Job V.(2023). Contenting with mental illness as a sign of strength not weakness: An identity‐reframing intervention boosts the successful goal pursuit of individuals with experiences of depression. Manuscript in Preparation.

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