The present research investigated the intergroup allocation behavior of members of low status groups. In two studies where status relations were either relatively illegitimate (Study 1, N = 139) or legitimate (Study 2, N = 114), undergraduate students completed a minimal group resource allocation task that took into account the intergroup status hierarchy. In both studies, members of low status groups showed two forms of in-group favoritism. They selected resource allocation choices that (a) compensated for their low status and led to intergroup fairness (compensatory favoritism) and (b) competed with the out-group for status and led to positive distinctiveness for the in-group (competitive favoritism). These results suggest that members of low status groups use in-group favoritism to make their group (a) as good as the high status out-group and (b) better than the high status out-group. The findings support the idea that in-group favoritism can serve different functions.KEYWORDS: in-group favoritism; intergroup fairness; low status groups; social identity theory; minimal group.
LOW STATUS GROUPS' IN-GROUP FAVORITISM 3Low Status Groups Show In-Group Favoritism to Compensate for their Low Status and to Compete for Higher Status Group status refers to the relative position of a group on an evaluative dimension based on intergroup comparisons with other relevant social groups (e.g., Tajfel & Turner, 1979). Previous research has demonstrated that members of low status groups sometimes show out-group favoritism (e.g., Riechl, 1997;Sachdev & Bourhis, 1987, 1991Turner & Brown, 1978) and sometimes show in-group favoritism (e.g., Branthwaite, Doyle, & Lightbown, 1979;Commins & Lockwood, 1979b;Klein & Azzi, 2001;Mummendey et al., 1992;Reichl, 1997;Sachdev & Bourhis, 1984;Scheepers, Spears, Doosje, & Manstead, 2006;Turner & Brown, 1978; van Knippenberg, 1984; for reviews, see Bettencourt, Charlton, Dorr, & Hume, 2001;Brewer, 1979;Mullen, Brown, & Smith, 1992). Key moderators of these in-group and out-group favoritism effects are the stability and legitimacy of the intergroup status hierarchy (Tajfel & Turner, 1979). When status relations are perceived to be unstable and illegitimate, members of low status groups tend to show in-group favoritism (e.g., Bettencourt et al., 2001). In contrast, when status relations are perceived to be stable and legitimate, members of low status groups tend to show out-group favoritism, especially on statusrelevant dimensions (Bettencourt et al., 2001;Mullen et al., 1992).Low status groups' out-group favoritism has generated considerable debate and discussion in the literature because it represents a theoretically-important exception to the more common in-group favoritism effect Rubin & Hewstone, 2004). Following social identity theory, Rubin and Hewstone (2004) conceptualize this low status group out-group favoritism as consensual discrimination because it reflects consensual perceptions of intergroup status that are held by members of both the high and low status groups. In contrast...