Affiliation:
1. Institute for Research, Development and Evaluation Bern University of Teacher Education Bern Switzerland
2. Institute of Education University of Münster Münster Germany
3. National Anti‐Bullying Research and Resource Centre Dublin City University Dublin Ireland
4. Department of Health Sciences Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus‐Senftenberg Cottbus Germany
Abstract
AbstractAlthough it is known that social dominance orientation directly affects hate speech perpetration, few studies have explored the mechanisms by which this effect takes place during adolescence. Based on the socio‐cognitive theory of moral agency, we aimed to fill this gap in the literature by exploring the direct and indirect effects of social dominance orientation on hate speech perpetration in offline and online settings. The sample included seventh, eigth, and ninth graders (N = 3225) (51.2% girls, 37.2% with an immigrant background) from 36 Swiss and German schools who completed a survey about hate speech, social dominance orientation, empathy, and moral disengagement. A multilevel mediation path model revealed that social dominance orientation had a direct effect on offline and online hate speech perpetration. Moreover, social dominance also had indirect effects via low levels of empathy and high levels of moral disengagement. No gender differences were observed. Our findings are discussed regarding the potential contribution to preventing hate speech during adolescence.
Subject
General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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