Dr Patricio Saavedra


Curriculum vitae



Instituto de Ciencias Sociales

Universidad de O'Higgins



When nonactivists care: Group efficacy mediates the effect of social identification and perceived instability on the legitimacy of collective action


Journal article


Gloria Jiménez-Moya, Daniel Miranda, J. Drury, Patricio Saavedra, Roberto González
2019

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Jiménez-Moya, G., Miranda, D., Drury, J., Saavedra, P., & González, R. (2019). When nonactivists care: Group efficacy mediates the effect of social identification and perceived instability on the legitimacy of collective action.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Jiménez-Moya, Gloria, Daniel Miranda, J. Drury, Patricio Saavedra, and Roberto González. “When Nonactivists Care: Group Efficacy Mediates the Effect of Social Identification and Perceived Instability on the Legitimacy of Collective Action” (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Jiménez-Moya, Gloria, et al. When Nonactivists Care: Group Efficacy Mediates the Effect of Social Identification and Perceived Instability on the Legitimacy of Collective Action. 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{gloria2019a,
  title = {When nonactivists care: Group efficacy mediates the effect of social identification and perceived instability on the legitimacy of collective action},
  year = {2019},
  author = {Jiménez-Moya, Gloria and Miranda, Daniel and Drury, J. and Saavedra, Patricio and González, Roberto}
}

Abstract

In recent years, multiple social movements have emerged around the world. In addition, public surveys indicate the highest recorded levels of support for protest. In this context of acceptance of collective action, we examine the role of nonactivists in the perceived legitimacy of social movements, as this “passive” support can contribute to social change. Given that antecedents of legitimacy have been neglected in the literature, we carried out a survey (N = 605) among a general sample of the population in Chile to shed light on this issue. We found that social identification with movements and perceived instability predicted the perceived legitimacy of protests by social movements, and that both variables had only indirect effects through group efficacy. This suggests that perceiving social movements as able to achieve success can lead nonactivists to perceive their actions as legitimate, highlighting the importance to movements of being seen to be effective.


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