Professorship for Social and Organisational Psychology of Social Work
Organisational unit: Professoship
Organisation profile
At the chair of “Social and Organizational Psychology of Social Work” we deal with the overarching question of how people’s memberships in social groups and their social identities (based on, for instance, ethnicity or socioeconomic status) affect their experiences and behaviors. We are interested in negative phenomena (e.g., prejudice, exclusion) and approaches to reduce them as well as in positive phenomena (e.g., helping behavior across group boundaries) and approaches to promote them in different settings of social work (e.g., in the context of counselling) and beyond (e.g., in the context of school).
Main research areas
Research
At the chair of “Social and Organizational Psychology of Social Work” we deal with the overarching question of how people’s memberships in social groups and their social identities (based on, for instance, ethnicity or socioeconomic status) affect their experiences and behaviors. We are interested in negative phenomena (e.g., prejudice, exclusion) and approaches to reduce them as well as in positive phenomena (e.g., helping behavior across group boundaries) and approaches to promote them in different settings of social work (e.g., in the context of counselling) and beyond (e.g., in the context of school).
We conduct both basic research in the laboratory and applied research. Our research can be grouped around the following topics:
- Intergroup prosocial behavior: This research examines the determinants of giving and receiving or seeking help across group boundaries in professional settings (e.g. social services) and non-professional settings (e.g. everyday life, volunteering). The focus is, among other things, on the role of empathy (on the part of helpers) and trust (on the part of helpers and helpees).
- Approaches to reducing negative intergroup processes: This research examines the effectiveness of different intervention approaches to reduce negative intergroup processes. The focus is on approaches to reduce prejudice (especially entertainment education approaches) and to overcome psychological barriers between members of privileged and disadvantaged social groups.
- Social context and intergroup processes: This research examines the extent to which stereotypes, prejudices, and discrimination are affected by the social context which individuals are embedded in. The focus here is, among other things, on the question of whether the ethnic composition of school classes has an impact on teachers’ discriminating behavior (see project "Kontext-basierte Diskriminierung im Schulkontext: Der Einfluss der ethnischen Zusammensetzung von Schulklassen auf die Verwendung von disziplinierenden Maßnahmen durch Lehrkräfte").
- 2022
- Published
Beyond stereotypes: Prejudice as an important missing force explaining group disparities
Essien, I., Stelter, M., Rohmann, A. & Degner, J., 05.2022, In: Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 45, 3 p., e74.Research output: Journal contributions › Comments / Debate / Reports › Research
- Published
Racial bias in police traffic stops: White residents' county-level prejudice and stereotypes are related to disproportionate stopping of Black drivers
Stelter, M., Essien, I., Sander, C. & Degner, J., 01.04.2022, In: Psychological Science. 33, 4, p. 483-496 14 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Can cross-group contact predict advantaged group member’s willingness to engage in costly solidarity-based actions? Yes, if the contact is politicized
Becker, J. C., Wright, S. C. & Siem, B., 03.2022, In: Testing, Psychometrics, Methodology in Applied Psychology. 29, 1 Special Issue, p. 123-139 17 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
The relationship between empathic concern and perceived personal costs for helping and how it is affected by similarity perceptions
Siem, B., 02.01.2022, In: The Journal of Social Psychology. 162, 1, p. 178-197 20 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Stereotype in Kindergärten und Kindertagesstätten: Theoretische Grundlagen, empirische Evidenz und Interventionsansätze für pädagogisches Fachpersonal
Froehlich, L., Essien, I. & Martiny, S. E., 2022, Stereotype in der Schule II: Ursachen und Möglichkeiten der Intervention. Glock, S. (ed.). Wiesbaden: Springer, p. 137–170 34 p.Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Chapter › peer-review
- 2021
- Published
Do members of disadvantaged groups explain group status with group stereotypes?
Degner, J., Floether, J. C. & Essien, I., 18.11.2021, In: Frontiers in Psychology. 12, 16 p., 750606.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
The role of self-evaluation in predicting attitudes toward supporters of COVID-19-related conspiracy theories: A direct and a conceptual replication of Cichoka et al. (2016)
Siem, B., Kretzmeyer, B. & Stürmer, S., 10.2021, In: Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology. 15, p. 1-14 14 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Entertainment Education as a Means to Reduce Anti-Muslim Prejudice - For Whom Does It Work Best? An Extended Replication of Murrar and Brauer (2018)
Siem, B., Neymeyer, L. & Rohmann, A., 01.01.2021, In: Social Psychology. 52, 1, p. 51-60 10 p.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review