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Impact Factor:1.000 | Ranking:Psychology, Multidisciplinary 67 out of 129 | 5-Year Impact Factor:1.063 | 5-Year Ranking:Psychology, Multidisciplinary 76 out of 129
Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports with Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

Four problems for researchers using social categories

  1. Alex Gillespie
  2. Caroline S Howarth
  3. Flora Cornish
  1. London School of Economics, UK
  1. Alex Gillespie, London School of Economics, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK Email: a.t.gillespie{at}lse.ac.uk

Abstract

Research on lay categorization processes has revealed that it can lead to distortions. Yet researchers routinely categorize people into groups and cultures. We argue that researchers should be aware that social categories are (1) perspectival, (2) historical, (3) disrupted by the movement of people, and (4) re-constitutive of the phenomena they seek to describe. We illustrate these problems with reference to contemporary research on globalization and the “clash of cultures”. It is argued that problematizing cultural categories would do more to reduce inter-group conflict than reifying them.

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