‘This country is OURS’: The exclusionary potential of collective psychological ownership

Publication date

2021-01

Authors

Nijs, TomISNI 0000000492859903
Martinovic, BorjaISNI 0000000387920178
Verkuyten, MaykelORCID 0000-0003-0137-1527ISNI 0000000114807698
Sedikides, Constantine

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Political campaign slogans, such as ‘Take back control of our country’ (United Kingdom Independence Party) and ‘The Netherlands ours again’ (Dutch Party for Freedom), indicate that right-wing populism appeals to the belief that the country is ‘ours’, and therefore, ‘we’ have the exclusive right to determine what happens. We examined this sense of ownership of the country (i.e. collective psychological ownership [CPO]) with the related determination right in relation to exclusionary attitudes and voting behaviour. Among Dutch (Study 1, N = 572) and British (Study 2, N = 495) participants, we found that CPO explained anti-immigrant and anti-EU attitudes, and these attitudes in turn accounted for voting ‘leave’ in the 2016 Brexit referendum in the British sample (Study 2). Additionally, CPO was more strongly related to negative immigrant attitudes among right-wing Dutch participants, whereas it was more strongly related to negative EU attitudes and voting ‘leave’ among left-wing British participants. CPO contributes to the understanding of critical contemporary social attitudes and political behaviour.

Keywords

anti-EU attitudes, anti-immigrant attitudes, Brexit referendum, collective psychological ownership, exclusive determination right, Social Psychology

Citation

Nijs, T, Martinovic, B, Verkuyten, M & Sedikides, C 2021, '‘This country is OURS’ : The exclusionary potential of collective psychological ownership', British Journal of Social Psychology, vol. 60, no. 1, pp. 171-195. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjso.12386