Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore relative contribution of several dispositional (right-wing authoritarianism and social dominance orientation) identity (national identity, nationalism and cosmopolitism) and situational antecedents (perception of intergroup threat) of subtle and blatant ethnic prejudice, along with multigroup moderation effect of national identity. The participants were 582 undergraduate students of University of Zagreb. Research has shown that high and low national identifiers significantly differ in all measures, except on orientation on social domination. Path analysis of composite results on latent variable has proven significant role of symbolic intergroup threat and dispositional factors in prediction of prejudice toward national minorities, whereas national attachment and national identity strength did not have strong impact on prediction. Implications of these results, namely limited possibilities for predicting subtle prejudice with this set of predictors, will be thoroughly discussed in this paper.
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