ABSTRACT

This edited volume provides an up-to-date review of current research on ostracism, social exclusion, and rejection. The book shows why exclusion and rejection occur, how they affect the excluded individuals, and the consequences they might have for individuals and organizations.

Ostracism, social exclusion, and rejection are common phenomena, both at the individual level, such as ostracism in the classroom or at the workplace, as well as on a societal or even global scale, such as immigration or asylum policies. Examining key concepts such as the long-term effects of ostracism, the developmental and cultural perspective on ostracism, and the detrimental impact that social exclusion may have on individuals and societies, the authors provide an up-to-date overview of the research field and present new conceptual models and methodological approaches. Featuring discussion of promising areas, novel pathways for research, and cutting-edge developments, this is the most comprehensive bringing-together of research on this topic.

The book gives both a broad state-of-the-art overview of the field as well as discussing cutting-edge ideas and promising areas for future research; it is essential for students, researchers of social psychology, and policy makers interested in this field.

chapter |17 pages

About flames and boogeymen

Social norms affect individuals’ construal of social exclusion

chapter |17 pages

Dealing with social exclusion

An analysis of psychological strategies

chapter |18 pages

How self-talk promotes self-regulation

Implications for coping with emotional pain

chapter |20 pages

Hurt feelings

Physical pain, social exclusion, and the psychology of pain overlap

chapter |16 pages

Physiostracism

A case for non-invasive measures of arousal in ostracism research

chapter |19 pages

Observing ostracism

How observers interpret and respond to ostracism situations

chapter |16 pages

Workplace ostracism

What’s it good for?

chapter |19 pages

Moralization as legitimization for ostracism

Effects on intergroup dynamics and social cohesion