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Journal ArticleDOI

Norm Perception as a Vehicle for Social Change

Margaret Tankard, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2016 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 1, pp 181-211
TLDR
This article describe three sources of information that people use to understand norms: individual behavior, summary information about a group, and institutional signals, and discuss conditions under which influence over perceived norms is likely to be stronger, based on the source of normative information and individuals' relationship to the source.
Abstract
How can we change social norms, the standards describing typical or desirable behavior? Because individuals’ perceptions of norms guide their personal behavior, influencing these perceptions is one way to create social change. And yet individuals do not form perceptions of typical or desirable behavior in an unbiased manner. Individuals attend to select sources of normative information, and their resulting perceptions rarely match actual rates of behavior in their environment. Thus, changing social norms requires an understanding of how individuals perceive norms in the first place. We describe three sources of information that people use to understand norms—individual behavior, summary information about a group, and institutional signals. Social change interventions have used each source to influence perceived norms and behaviors, including recycling, intimate-partner violence, and peer harassment. We discuss conditions under which influence over perceived norms is likely to be stronger, based on the source of the normative information and individuals’ relationship to the source. Finally, we point to future research and suggest when it is most appropriate to use a norm change strategy in the interest of behavior and social change.

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Citations
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Inoculating the Public against Misinformation about Climate Change

TL;DR: The current research bridges the divide by exploring how people evaluate and process consensus cues in a polarized information environment and evidence is provided that it is possible to pre‐emptively protect public attitudes about climate change against real‐world misinformation.
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The Effect of a Supreme Court Decision Regarding Gay Marriage on Social Norms and Personal Attitudes.

TL;DR: Findings provide the first experimental evidence that an institutional decision can change perceptions of social norms, which have been shown to guide behavior, even when individual opinions are unchanged.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Honesty on the Streets. A Field Study on Newspaper Purchasing

TL;DR: This paper found that a moral reminder increases the level of honesty in payments, whereas the same message has no effect on whether one is honest, and argued that these results are consistent with a preference for honesty, based on an internalized social norm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is It Better Not to Talk? Group Polarization, Extended Contact, and Perspective Taking in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo

TL;DR: Compared to individuals exposed to the soap opera only, talk show listeners discussed more but were more intolerant, more mindful of grievances, and less likely to aid disliked community members.
Journal ArticleDOI

Promoting Recycling: Private Values, Social Norms, and Economic Incentives

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the role of social norms and economic incentives in pro-environmental behavior and conclude that social norms are the result of legal regimes and regulatory policies that establish standards for behavior.
Posted Content

Gossip: Identifying Central Individuals in a Social Network

TL;DR: It is shown that boundedly-rational individuals can, simply by tracking sources of gossip, identify those who are most central in a network according to "diffusion centrality," which nests other standard centrality measures.
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Finally, we point to future research and suggest when it is most appropriate to use a norm change strategy in the interest of behavior and social change.