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The workplace is an environment where individuals have little choice about with whom they interact. As such, employees may find themselves engaged in conversations with coworkers whose political opinions and perspectives are divergent from their own. In the present study, we examined how coworkers' (dis)similarity in political identity is related to the quality of their interpersonal interactions and subsequent well-being. We predicted that political identity dissimilarity is associated with experiences of workplace incivility and, in turn, declines in psychological and occupational well-being. We tested our hypotheses in a four-wave survey study conducted during the 2012 U.S. presidential election using structural equation modeling. Consistent with our expectations, results indicated that political identity dissimilarity was associated with increased reports of incivility experiences instigated by coworkers, which, in turn, was associated with increased burnout and turnover intentions and diminished job satisfaction. The relationship between incivility and well-being was mediated by psychological distress. Overall, the findings demonstrate that political identity dissimilarity is detrimentally related to job attitudes and well-being via triggering workplace incivility, which provides meaningful implications for organizations on how to mitigate the negative influences of identity dissimilarity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smi.2856 | DOI Listing |
J Asthma
September 2025
Curtin Medical School, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia; Curtin Medical Research Institute (Curtin -MRI), Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia.
This article examines the chronic asthma of Ernesto "Che" Guevara not merely as a biomedical condition, but as a metaphorical and existential element of his revolutionary identity. Drawing on Aristotle's theory of metaphor and S. Sontag's cultural critique of illness, it explores how Guevara's lifelong struggle with asthma shaped his medical vocation and informed his political radicalism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJMIR Form Res
September 2025
School of Public Health, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States.
Background: Social media platforms, such as Facebook, provide a dynamic public space where users of various racial and ethnic backgrounds share content related to identity, politics, and other social issues. These platforms allow racially minoritized groups to both challenge racial silencing and express cultural pride. At the same time, they expose users to racism and stereotypes that can negatively affect their mental and physical health through psychosocial stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEClinicalMedicine
August 2025
Department of Psychiatry, University of Groningen, University Medical Centre Groningen, P.O. Box 30.001, 9700 RB, Groningen, the Netherlands.
Background: Knowledge of diversity in gender identity and gender roles in the general population is limited. This study aimed to report the prevalence estimates of gender identity and gender roles among the adult general population, stratified by age and sex.
Methods: In the third general assessment of the prospective Dutch Lifelines Cohort Study, conducted between 2019 and 2023, sex and current gender identity were assessed using a self-reported categorical item, in which participants aged 18 years and older could indicate their sex assigned at birth (male or female) and current gender identity (man or woman), or select the option with a free-text field.
F1000Res
September 2025
Information Systems, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Muscat Governorate, 123, Oman.
Background: Ensuring the security and trustworthiness of a digitized and automated electoral process remains a significant challenge in democratic systems. As digital voting systems are increasingly being investigated worldwide, ensuring the integrity of the process using robust security measures is of great importance. This paper presents a simplified model to enhance electoral integrity by leveraging Blockchain technology in the context of Oman's digital voting system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Sociol
August 2025
Department of Psychology of Developmental and Socialisation Processes, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
The paper explores the daily life within Albanian internment camps during Enver Hoxha's prolonged communist regime, covering the period from 1944 to 1985. Extensive in-depth interviews with former internees underpin the research, which investigates the multifaceted strategies employed by these captives to resist the totalitarian obliteration of time and space, inherent in total institutions. These camps were not merely sites of physical isolation but were ideologically conceived as instruments of political repression, mirroring the Soviet Gulag system.
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