4.2 Article

Intergroup attitudes between meat-eaters and meat-avoiders: The role of dietary ingroup identification

Journal

GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 1223-1247

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/13684302211012768

Keywords

intergroup attitudes; meat-eating; morality; social identity; vegetarianism

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The study found that there is a strong sense of group identity and perceived discrimination between vegetarians/vegans and meat-eaters, while stronger dietary ingroup identification among meat-avoiders is associated with more negative outgroup attitudes.
Why might some meat-eaters and meat-avoiders express negative attitudes toward each other? We investigated intergroup attitudes and potential underpinnings of these attitudes across three different dietary groups-veg*ans (vegetarians and vegans), flexitarians (people who restrict their meat intake partially), and meat-eaters-in Turkey (N-Study 1 = 366; N-Study 2 = 450). In both studies, veg*ans showed the greatest ingroup favouritism and reported the highest ingroup identification and perceived discrimination. Meat enjoyment, moral consideration, and perceived veg*an threat (among meat-eaters) predicted dietary ingroup identification in Study 1, whereas perceived discrimination towards one's dietary group was the strongest predictor of identification among all dietary groups in Study 2. Among meat-avoiders, but not among meat-eaters, stronger dietary ingroup identification was associated with more negative outgroup attitudes. Findings are discussed in light of social identity theories and intergroup perspectives.

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