Deindividuation. (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://changingminds.org/explanations/theories/deindividuation.htm.
Apply: The community
you are working with will have less individuation because they are a part of
that community. For example, if we are talking about a community of tenants in
an apartment, their group identity revolves around their role as tenants of X
apartment building. As a community developer working with the tenants to
improve access for limited mobility tenants, you could work to decrease the
sense of deindividuation among them so that they feel more like individuals. As
a free-thinking individual, they are more likely to share out-of-the-box ideas
for solutions that they may not if they feel too attached to the identity of
the whole group.
Adapt: In politics, a politician’s goal is to have agreement
on an issue so that legislation can be passed that favors it. The politician
wants to decrease individuation so that the group he or she is speaking to identifies
not as an individual person with unique perspectives, but shares the feeling of
the group. The politician does not want dissent that comes from critical
thinkers (generally speaking,) but wants
one agreed upon issue to be felt passionately by all people, so it would be good strategy to build up the identity of the group, not the individual.
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