How identification processes and inter-community relationships affect sense of community

Abstract

Based on the Social Identity and Social Categorization Theory framework, this study investigated how identification with the physical component of a community (i.e., the place identity), the perception of a community (i.e., the ingroup) in terms of cohesion and entitativity (which results from the identification process), and the correlate perception of one or more territorial communities as laying beyond a community’s boundaries (i.e., the outgroup) affect a psychological sense of community (PSOC). A survey was conducted with 477 residents (55.1% female; aged 16-80 years) in the Salento region of Italy. The results showed that the more individuals identified with the spatial community, the more they felt connected to their fellow residents and the more satisfied they were with their social relationships. More importantly, the findings highlighted the contribution of ingroup-outgroup relationships on shaping PSOC, which suggests that determinants of PSOC should include both the internal identification processes and the processes that lead local communities to relate and behave towards other communities

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Archivio della ricerca- Università di Roma La Sapienza

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Last time updated on 12/11/2016

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