Symbolic Action Motivates Further Collective Action by Increasing Identification With the Common Cause
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John Wiley and Sons Ltd.
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CC BY-NC 4.0
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Publicly broadcasting one's support for a social cause is often maligned as ‘slacktivism’. We investigate whether such symbolic action by advantaged group members in support of the cause of a disadvantaged group can motivate more concrete collective action when it solidifies a sense of belonging to a common cause. Across four preregistered studies (total N = 1204), voluntary (Studies 2 and 3), but not involuntary (Studies 1 and 4) symbolic action by advantaged group members increased opinion-based identification as part of a cause. This change in identification predicted increased collective action intentions and collective action in the form of donating to relevant charities. Moreover, in Study 3 we also found a significant indirect effect of symbolic action on collective action via increased identification. A competing hypothesis, that symbolic action might demotivate further action by reducing collective guilt, was not supported.
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Bingley WJ, Mirnajafi Z, Rhee JJ, Robinson K, Stanley SK, Wilson MS, Haslam SA, Subašić E. (2026). Symbolic Action Motivates Further Collective Action by Increasing Identification With the Common Cause. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology. 36. 2.
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