PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Having a lot of a good thing: multiple important group memberships as a source of self-esteem.

  • Jolanda Jetten,
  • Nyla R Branscombe,
  • S Alexander Haslam,
  • Catherine Haslam,
  • Tegan Cruwys,
  • Janelle M Jones,
  • Lijuan Cui,
  • Genevieve Dingle,
  • James Liu,
  • Sean C Murphy,
  • Anh Thai,
  • Zoe Walter,
  • Airong Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0124609
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. e0124609

Abstract

Read online

Membership in important social groups can promote a positive identity. We propose and test an identity resource model in which personal self-esteem is boosted by membership in additional important social groups. Belonging to multiple important group memberships predicts personal self-esteem in children (Study 1a), older adults (Study 1b), and former residents of a homeless shelter (Study 1c). Study 2 shows that the effects of multiple important group memberships on personal self-esteem are not reducible to number of interpersonal ties. Studies 3a and 3b provide longitudinal evidence that multiple important group memberships predict personal self-esteem over time. Studies 4 and 5 show that collective self-esteem mediates this effect, suggesting that membership in multiple important groups boosts personal self-esteem because people take pride in, and derive meaning from, important group memberships. Discussion focuses on when and why important group memberships act as a social resource that fuels personal self-esteem.