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Featured researches published by Danielle Blaylock.


Research Papers in Education | 2017

Interpretations of national identity in post-conflict Northern Ireland: A comparison of different school settings

Andrea Furey; Caitlin Donnelly; Joanne Hughes; Danielle Blaylock

Abstract It is generally accepted that education has a significant role to play in any society transitioning from conflict to a more peaceful dispensation. Indeed, some have argued that the education system potentially represents the single most effective agent of social change with the capacity to bridge ethnic division in conflict affected countries. Despite the potential, educational policy-makers grapple with the dilemma as to precisely how school systems can best facilitate this agenda. This paper thus attempts to shed light upon the dilemma by exploring pupil identity and associated intergroup attitudes across various school types in Northern Ireland. Five schools were selected for the study with each one representing a particular sector within the Northern Irish education system (maintained grammar, maintained secondary, controlled grammar, controlled secondary, integrated). This led to a total sample size of 265 pupils. The main findings show that children across separate Catholic, separate Protestant and mixed Catholic and Protestant educational contexts construct and interpret identity differently. At the same time, our data suggest that no one school setting has supremacy in promoting social cohesion. The implications of these findings are discussed.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2017

Studying Positive and Negative Direct and Extended Contact: Complementing Self-Reports With Social Network Analysis

Ralph Wölfer; Eva Jaspers; Danielle Blaylock; Clarissa Wigoder; Joanne Hughes; Miles Hewstone

Traditionally, studies of intergroup contact have primarily relied on self-reports, which constitute a valid method for studying intergroup contact, but has limitations, especially if researchers are interested in negative or extended contact. In three studies, we apply social network analyses to generate alternative contact parameters. Studies 1 and 2 examine self-reported and network-based parameters of positive and negative contact using cross-sectional datasets (N = 291, N = 258), indicating that both methods help explain intergroup relations. Study 3 examines positive and negative direct and extended contact using the previously validated network-based contact parameters in a large-scale, international, and longitudinal dataset (N = 12,988), demonstrating that positive and negative direct and extended contact all uniquely predict intergroup relations (i.e., intergroup attitudes and future outgroup contact). Findings highlight the value of social network analysis for examining the full complexity of contact including positive and negative forms of direct and extended contact.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Beyond group engagement : multiple pathways from encounters with the police to cooperation and compliance in Northern Ireland

Samuel Pehrson; Lee Devaney; Dominic Bryan; Danielle Blaylock

In a sample of young people in Northern Ireland (N = 819), we examine the relationships between the quality of experience with police officers and police legitimacy. We examine potential pathways through which experiences may either support or undermine the legitimacy of the police, and thus cooperation and compliance with them. We find evidence that perceptions of the police as having goals that align with those of wider society, and as being fair in general, mediate relations between the quality of encounters and legitimacy, which in turn mediates the relation with cooperation and compliance. Identification with wider society was not a reliable mediator, contrary to our predictions based on the Group Engagement Model. Moreover, our analysis of the structure of police fairness perceptions finds no support for the distinction between procedural and distributive police fairness as usually conceived. Implications for the social psychological understanding of legitimate authority are discussed.


Archive | 2012

Extremism and the Psychology of Uncertainty

Michael A. Hogg; Danielle Blaylock


Archive | 2010

Encyclopedia of identity

Ronald L. Jackson; Michael A. Hogg; Ronald C. Arnett; Jacqueline Imani Bryant; James Haywood Rolling; Corey D. B. Walker; Mark Western; Danielle Blaylock; Stephen Hocker; Amanda G. McKendree; Celeste Grayson Seymour; Algernon Williams


Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism | 2013

Shared Education Initiatives in Northern Ireland: A Model for Effective Intergroup Contact in Divided Jurisdictions

Danielle Blaylock; Joanne Hughes


Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology | 2016

‘Something That Unites Us All’: Understandings of St. Patrick's Day Parades as Representing the Irish National Group

Aisling T. O'Donnell; Orla T. Muldoon; Danielle Blaylock; Clifford Stevenson; Dominic Bryan; Stephen Reicher; Samuel Pehrson


Archive | 2011

Extremism and the Psychology of Uncertainty: Hogg/Extremism and the Psychology of Uncertainty

Michael A. Hogg; Danielle Blaylock


Ricerche di Pedagogia e Didattica. Journal of Theories and Research in Education | 2015

Does social deprivation influence inter-group contact outcomes for pupils in Northern Ireland?

Joanne Hughes; Danielle Blaylock; Caitlin Donnelly


Archive | 2012

Preface: From Uncertainty to Extremism

Michael A. Hogg; Danielle Blaylock

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Dominic Bryan

Queen's University Belfast

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Samuel Pehrson

University of St Andrews

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Michael A. Hogg

Claremont Graduate University

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Caitlin Donnelly

Queen's University Belfast

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Stephanie Burns

Queen's University Belfast

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Jennifer Hanratty

Queen's University Belfast

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