TY - JOUR
T1 - A social mind
T2 - The context of John Turner’s work and its Influence
AU - Reicher, Stephen D.
AU - Alexander Haslam, S.
AU - Spears, Russell
AU - Reynolds, Katherine J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2012 European Association of Social Psychology.
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - We review John Turner’s contribution to social psychology and his ongoing influence on the field. We provide an account of his research and theorising framed by the two major theoretical frameworks which he developed: social identity theory (together with Henri Tajfel) and self-categorisation theory. We elaborate the contribution of his work in developing an understanding of intergroup relations (in social identity theory) and specifying the social nature of the self, the salience of social identities, and of the importance of social identity for social influence, stereotyping, power, and leadership (within self-categorisation theory). We then locate these research programmes within Turner’s broader metatheoretical goal of addressing major problems, issues, and themes within social psychology. These centre on (a) a critique of the pervasive anti-collectivism within much of social psychology, (b) a normative/political agenda for social change, and (c) a commitment to the social nature of the individual mind. These themes explicitly or implicitly infused his research and continue to inspire much of the work in the theoretical tradition that he pioneered.
AB - We review John Turner’s contribution to social psychology and his ongoing influence on the field. We provide an account of his research and theorising framed by the two major theoretical frameworks which he developed: social identity theory (together with Henri Tajfel) and self-categorisation theory. We elaborate the contribution of his work in developing an understanding of intergroup relations (in social identity theory) and specifying the social nature of the self, the salience of social identities, and of the importance of social identity for social influence, stereotyping, power, and leadership (within self-categorisation theory). We then locate these research programmes within Turner’s broader metatheoretical goal of addressing major problems, issues, and themes within social psychology. These centre on (a) a critique of the pervasive anti-collectivism within much of social psychology, (b) a normative/political agenda for social change, and (c) a commitment to the social nature of the individual mind. These themes explicitly or implicitly infused his research and continue to inspire much of the work in the theoretical tradition that he pioneered.
KW - John Turner
KW - Prejudice
KW - Self-categorisation
KW - Social change
KW - Social identity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84919961939&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10463283.2012.745672
DO - 10.1080/10463283.2012.745672
M3 - Article
SN - 1046-3283
VL - 23
SP - 344
EP - 385
JO - European Review of Social Psychology
JF - European Review of Social Psychology
IS - 1
ER -