Authors
Robert J Cramer, Audrey K Miller, Amanda M Amacker, Alixandra C Burks
Publication date
2013/1
Journal
Journal of Counseling Psychology
Volume
60
Issue
1
Pages
64
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Research has indicated that people who are more open to novel and diverse experiences express less prejudicial views concerning minority group members. The openness–prejudice relationship, however, may be mediated by the degree to which individuals adhere to traditional social convention and absolutist thinking patterns. Thus, informed by the Dual-Process Cognitive-Motivational Model of ideology and prejudice (Duckitt, 2001; Duckitt & Sibley, 2009) and the Five-Factor Model of personality (Costa & McCrae, 1992; McCrae & Costa, 2003), we investigated right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) as a mediator of the relationship between openness and antigay prejudice. Participants were college students from universities in the mid-Atlantic (Sample 1, n= 199) and southeastern (Sample 2, n= 244) United States. Hypotheses were tested in both samples. First, bivariate relations among openness, RWA, and …
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