Amélie Mummendey

Amelie Mummendey 2009

Amélie Mummendey (* 19 June 1944 in Bonn, Germany) is a German social psychologist.[1] Since 2007, she has fulfilled the office of Vice-Rector for the Graduate Academy at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena.

Biography

Amélie Mummendey completed her M.Sc. in Psychology at the University of Bonn, followed by her PhD at the University of Mainz in 1970, and her Habilitation at the University of Münster in 1974. She held a chair in social psychology at the University of Münster (1980–1997) before taking up a chair in social psychology at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena in 1997. In 2007, Amélie Mummendey was elected as the first Vice-Rector for the Graduate Academy at the University of Jena.[2]

Research

Her research addresses the social psychology of social identity and relations between social groups, in particular she investigates determinants of negative intergroup attitudes and behaviors as well as determinants of tolerance, acceptance, and appreciation of outgroups. While employing both experimental and field research, Amélie Mummendey and colleagues investigated social psychological issues of high social relevance such as the “positive-negative-asymmetry” in social discrimination and strategies to cope with threatened or negative social identities.[3][4]

Currently, Amélie Mummendey is particularly interested in determinants of both discrimination and tolerance between social groups, conflict and cooperation, constructive versus destructive coping with social change, threats to social identities and limitations of tolerance and affiliation of outgroup members. Amélie Mummendey and colleagues empirical findings as well as a number of new theoretical models developed by them have been published in numerous books and prestigious journals.[5]

Ingroup Projection Model

Together with Michael Wenzel, Amélie Mummendey developed the ingroup projection model (IPM).[6]

The IPM holds that members of one group always compare themselves to members of another group (e.g., Germans and Italians) by constantly using as a frame of reference a common superordinate group (e.g., Europeans). When a superordinate category is salient, subgroup members tend to project characteristics of their subgroup identity onto the prototype of the superordinate category. Therefore, members of one’s own subgroup appear to be good representatives – better members – of the superordinate category, while out-group members appear to be poorer representatives. Consequently, outgroup members are derogated and discriminated because they appear to deviate from the desired characteristics of the superordinate category.

A number of empirical studies support the main claims of the model and recent developments of underlying motivational and cognitive processes contribute to a deeper understanding of ingroup projection.[7] Current research investigates, among other things, new pathways for the reduction or avoidance of ingroup projection and therefore possibilities to foster intergroup tolerance.

Honorary Memberships

Member of the German Council of Science and Humanities (Wissenschaftsrat), 1997–2002

Member of European Science Foundation (ESF), 1999–2005

Member of ‘Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina’, since 2001

Chair of the Board of Trustees, Einstein Foundation Berlin, since 2009

Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, since 2009

Awards

Publications (selection)

Books

Articles

References

  1. "Amélie Mummendey". http://www.psychreg.com/. Psychreg. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  2. Simon, B. (2009). Foreword. In S. Otten, K. Sassenberg, & T. Kessler (eds.), Intergroup Relations: The Role of Motivation and Emotion (pp. ix-xii) Hove: Psychology Press.
  3. Mummendey, A., & Otten, S. (1998). Positive-negative asymmetry in social discrimination. European Review of Social Psychology, 9, 107-143.
  4. Mummendey, A., Kessler, T., Klink, A., & Mielke, R. (1999). Strategies to cope with negative social identity: Predictions by social identity theory and relative deprivation theory. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 7, 229-245.
  5. "Amélie Mummendey". http://www.psychreg.com/. Psychreg. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  6. Mummendey, A., & Wenzel, M. (1999). Social discrimination and tolerance in intergroup relations: Reactions to intergroup difference. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 3, 158 -174.
  7. Wenzel, Mummendey, & Waldzus (2007). Superordinate identities and intergroup conflict: The ingroup projection model. European Review of Social Psychology, 18, 331-372.
  8. http://www.thueringen.de/de/tmbwk/wissenschaft/forschung/forschungsfoerderung/ forschungspreis/forschungspreis_2005/grundlagen_II/content.html

External links

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