Publication | Closed Access
Women's Attitudes Toward Men: an Integrated Threat Theory Approach
113
Citations
39
References
2000
Year
Gendered PerceptionSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceSocial SciencesAttitude TheoryIntergroup RelationGender IdentityNegative ContactViolence Against WomenGender StudiesSymbolic ThreatSocial IdentityGendered ContextSocial InteractionApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryFeminist TheoryGender StereotypeSociologyAggressionAttitudes Toward Men
Three studies were conducted to measure the antecedents of women's attitudes toward men using the integrated threat model. Four types of threats were hypothesized to produce negative attitudes toward men: (1) realistic threat based on threats to women's political and economic power, (2) symbolic threat based on value differences, (3) intergroup anxiety experienced during social interaction with outgroup members, and (4) negative stereotypes of men. Negative contact was hypothesized to increase the perception of all four threats as well as to affect attitudes directly. The findings suggest that symbolic threat, intergroup anxiety, and negative contact are the strongest predictors of negative attitudes toward men. Contrary to expectation, realistic threat may not be important to women's attitudes toward men.
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