Envisioning Change: An Empirical Test of the Social Psychological Model of Utopian Thinking and Collective Action

Authors

  • Vivienne Badaan Department of Psychology, The American University of Beirut, Lebanon https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2127-0830
  • Carla Akil The Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship, The American University of Beirut, Lebanon
  • Yara Zebian Department of Psychology, The American University of Beirut, Lebanon
  • John T. Jost Department of Psychology, New York University, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.1120221140

Keywords:

utopian thinking, hope, construal level theory, abstraction, system justification, collective action, social justice

Abstract

This article provides the first empirical evidence of the theoretical model by Badaan et al. (2020) that proposes social psychological mechanisms whereby utopian thinking, which activates the social imagination, could enhance collective action intentions geared toward progressive social change. We anticipated that imagining better societies via utopian thinking would (a) increase social hope, (b) promote an abstract mindset that bridges psychological distance between the status quo in the present and the imagined, better future, (c) attenuate system justification motives, and (d) enhance social change-oriented collective action intentions. Using a structural equation modeling approach, our study provides preliminary support for some postulates of the theoretical model, paving the way for future research to further disentangle the psychological mechanisms by which utopian thinking influences collective action geared toward social change.

 

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Published

2022-04-19

How to Cite

Badaan, V., Akil, C., Zebian, Y., & Jost, J. T. . (2022). Envisioning Change: An Empirical Test of the Social Psychological Model of Utopian Thinking and Collective Action. Journal of Social Psychology Research, 1(1), 77–96. https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.1120221140