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Clifford Stevenson

Researcher at Nottingham Trent University

Publications -  91
Citations -  2284

Clifford Stevenson is an academic researcher from Nottingham Trent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social identity theory & Identity (social science). The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 80 publications receiving 1752 citations. Previous affiliations of Clifford Stevenson include Queen's University Belfast & Anglia Ruskin University.

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Adolescents’ views of food and eating: identifying barriers to healthy eating

TL;DR: Overall, healthy eating as a goal in its own right is notably absent from the data and would appear to be elided by competing pressures to eat unhealthily and to lose weight.
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‘They're not racist …’ Prejudice denial, mitigation and suppression in dialogue

TL;DR: It is argued that existing perspectives might usefully be extended to incorporate three additional considerations - that social actors may, on some occasions, act to defend not only themselves, but also others from charges of prejudice.
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Trying similarity, doing difference: the role of interviewer self-disclosure in interview talk with young people

TL;DR: This article examined the role of self-disclosure in the negotiation of category entitlement in interview interactions with young people. But their focus was on how an interviewer's attempts to do similarity may be interpreted as displays of similarity or indicators of difference by the participant, and map the implications that this may have for subsequent interview dialogue.
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Community identity as resource and context: A mixed method investigation of coping and collective action in a disadvantaged community

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a real-world stigmatized community group in order to investigate the community identity processes that act to enhance well-being and collective action and the consequences of stigmatisation for these processes.
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Explaining effervescence: Investigating the relationship between shared social identity and positive experience in crowds

TL;DR: Participants' perceptions of a shared identity amongst crowd members had an indirect effect on their positive experience at the event through increasing participants' sense that they were able to enact their collective identity and increasing the sense of intimacy with other crowd members.