Abstract
Citizenship involves being able to speak and be heard as a member of the community. This can be a formal right (e.g., a right to vote). It can also be something experienced in everyday life. However, the criteria for being judged a fellow member of the community are multiple and accorded different weights by different people. Thus, although one may self-define alongside one’s fellows, the degree to which these others reciprocate depends on the weight they give to various membership criteria. This suggests we approach everyday community membership in terms of an identity claims-making process in which first, an individual claims membership through invoking certain criteria of belonging, and second, others evaluate that claim. Pursuing this logic we report three experiments investigating the reception of such identity-claims. Study 1 showed that in Scotland a claim to membership of the national ingroup was accepted more if couched in terms of place of birth and ancestry rather than just in terms of one’s subjective identification. Studies 2 and 3 showed that this differential acceptance mattered for the claimant’s ability to be heard as a community member. We discuss the implications of these studies for the conceptualization of community membership and the realization of everyday citizenship rights.
Highlights
Citizenship involves being able to speak and be heard as a member of the community
Recent work has broadened our understanding of what citizenship entails and this requires that we attend to the everyday significance of being recognized as someone who ‘belongs’
In the current paper we wish to explore how social psychological theorizing on the benefits of being recognized as a bone-fide group member can help illuminate the processes involved in the claiming of everyday citizenship rights
Summary
In one (ethnic claim) he described how he was born in Scotland to Scottish parents who had moved to England where he had been brought up and educated. In the other (civic claim), he described how he was born in England to English parents but had chosen to move to live in Scotland and commit himself to Scottish interests. Both of these types of claim are commonplace in Scotland and their wording was based upon existing survey and interview data.
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