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Featured researches published by Patrizia Milesi.


Group Processes & Intergroup Relations | 2016

Online discussion, politicized identity, and collective action

Augusta Isabella Alberici; Patrizia Milesi

Although online discussions may stimulate political participation, little is known about how computer-mediated communication among members of political groups contributes to develop their politicized identity, thus indirectly stimulating collective action. Two studies involving activists from two web-based social movements investigated how online discussions moderate the effects of collective efficacy, group-based anger, and moral obligation on politicized identity. Self-reported frequency of online discussions and activists’ perceptions of two content-related characteristics of online discussions both interacted with collective efficacy and moral obligation beliefs in predicting politicized identity. Politicized identity mediated the effects of these interactions on collective action intention. We discuss how specific characteristics of online political discussions may contribute to politicize group identity via group-level and individual-level paths.


Group Processes & Intergroup Relations | 2018

Pluralistic morality and collective action: The role of moral foundations

Patrizia Milesi; Augusta Isabella Alberici

Starting from the pluralistic view of morality proposed by the moral foundations theory, this paper aims at highlighting the plurality of personal moral concerns that may drive people to collective action and at investigating how they are connected with other personal and group-based motivations to act (i.e., moral obligation, moral convictions, politicized group identity, group efficacy, and group-based anger). Moral foundations can be distinguished into individualizing foundations, aimed at protecting individual rights and well-being; and binding foundations, aimed at tightening people into ordered communities. We expected that collective action intention would be most strongly associated with an individualizing foundation in equality-focused movements, and with a binding foundation in conformity-focused ones. Four studies that examined activists of both liberal and conservative movements confirmed these expectations. The relevant foundations predicted collective action mainly through the mediation of moral obligation and politicized identity, but they also had some effects above and beyond them.


Europe’s Journal of Psychology | 2018

Online Discussion and the Moral Pathway to Identity Politicization and Collective Action

Augusta Isabella Alberici; Patrizia Milesi

Research on the mobilizing potential of the Internet has produced some controversy between optimistic vs. skeptical perspectives. Although some attention has been paid to the effects of online discussions on collective participation, very little is known about how people’s experience of online interactions affects the key psychosocial predictors of collective action. The present research investigated whether use of the Internet as a channel for deliberation influenced the moral pathway to collective mobilization by shaping users’ politicized identity, thereby indirectly influencing collective action. Results showed that when people perceived online discussions as a constructive communication context, their politicized identity was imbued with the meaning of responding to a moral obligation, and willingness to participate in collective action was sustained. However, when participants perceived that online discussions were not constructive, their identification with the movement did not refer to moral obligation, and intention to participate in collective action was not sustained. Our discussion focuses on the need to deepen investigation of how people experience the particularities of interacting online, and on how this can affect psychosocial processes leading to collective action.


Europe’s Journal of Psychology | 2017

Moral Foundations and Voting Intention in Italy

Patrizia Milesi

Based on the view of morality proposed by the Moral Foundations Theory, this paper investigates whether voting intention is associated with moral foundation endorsement in not perfectly bipolar electoral contexts. Three studies carried out in Italy from 2010 to 2013, showed that controlling for ideological orientation, moral foundation endorsement is associated with voting intention. In Study 1 and 3, in fictitious and real national elections, intention to vote for right-wing political groups rather than for left-wing rivals was associated with Sanctity, confirming previous results obtained in the U.S. Furthermore, as a function of the specific competing political groups in each of the examined contexts other moral foundations predicted voting intention. In Study 1, Care and Authority predicted voting intention for the major political groups rather than for an autonomist party that aimed at decreasing central government’s fiscal power in favor of fiscal regional autonomy. In Study 3, Loyalty predicted the intention to vote for the major parliamentarian parties rather than for a movement that aimed at capturing disaffection towards traditional politics. In Study 2, at real regional elections, Loyalty predicted voting intention for the incumbent right-wing governor rather than for the challengers and Fairness predicted voting intention for left-wing extra-parliamentarian political groups rather than for the major left-wing party. Thus multiple moral concerns can be associated with voting intention. In fragmented and unstable electoral contexts, at each election the context of the competing political groups may elicit specific moral concerns that can contribute to affect voting intention beyond ideological orientation.


European Journal of Social Psychology | 2001

Counterfactuals and roles: mock victims' and perpetrators' accounts of judicial cases

Patrizia Catellani; Patrizia Milesi


Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology | 2013

The influence of the Internet on the psychosocial predictors of collective action.

Augusta Isabella Alberici; Patrizia Milesi


European Journal of Social Psychology | 2004

Counterfactual thinking and stereotypes: The nonconformity effect

Patrizia Catellani; Augusta Isabella Alberici; Patrizia Milesi


Archive | 2005

When the social context frames the case: counterfactuals in the courtroom

Patrizia Catellani; Patrizia Milesi


Archive | 2006

Italy: the offspring of Fascism.

Patrizia Milesi; Antonello Chirumbolo; Patrizia Catellani


Archive | 2004

Turning Right? Socio-Economic Change and the Receptiveness of European Workers to the Extreme Right. Report on the Survey Analysis and Results

Yves De Weerdt; Hans De Witte; Patrizia Catellani; Patrizia Milesi

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Yves De Weerdt

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Daniela Marzana

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Fausto Colombo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Massimo Scaglioni

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Gudrun Hentges

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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