“…Huo and Binning (2008) suggested that people seek to be accorded status in interactions with authority figures, and inclusion in interactions with peers, but this hypothesis was not corroborated in later empirical investigations (Huo et al, 2010). Work in the social recognition framework by Simon et al’s has mostly focused on demonstrating a supreme role of equality in intergroup respect experiences (e.g., Reininger et al, 2020; Simon, Grabow, & Böhme, 2015), tending to neglect variations in the extent to which other forms of recognition result in feelings of respect (e.g., Simon et al, 2016; Simon, Grabow, & Böhme, 2015; but see Schaefer et al, 2021). Last, some contextualized definitions of respect have been brought forward for different professional situations (e.g., leadership: van Quaquebeke & Eckloff, 2010; nursing: Koskenniemi et al, 2015) or different relationships (between romantic partners or parent and child: Frei & Shaver, 2002).…”