The work in the first 18 months involved the following:
First, the appointment of one postdoc researcher, three PhD students and a project manager.
Second, team members have been (re-)analyzing existing public datasets that contain information on toleration and allow for an analysis of various correlates and measurement techniques.
Third, team members gave presentations at different seminars and research meetings to get feedback on theoretical, methodological and empirical ideas and proposals.
Fourth, we wrote one lengthy policy paper on toleration that was published (2019) in Social Issues and Policy Review, and two theoretical papers in which we further outline our theoretical thinking and approach.
The work in last months 18-36 of the project involved the following:
(1) Large-scale data collections in Germany and the Netherlands in May 2019 and March 2020;
(2) Seven papers being published or accepted for open-access publications in international peer-reviewed journals;
(3) Eight papers submitted and under review with international peer-reviewed Journals;
(4) Organization of a panel and three paper presentations at the annual Scientific Meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) in Lisbon, Portugal (July 12-15);
(5) Presentation of two papers at the scientific meeting on Conflict and Political Psychology, Lisbon, Portugal (July 16-17);
(6). Poster presentation at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology annual conference, New Orleans, Louisiana. United States (February 29);
(7) proposals of three conference papers which have been accepted for presentation at the 2020 Annual Scientific Meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) in Berlin (July 14-17);
(8) proposal of a full panel session on ‘being tolerated’ that was accepted for the conference of the European Association of Social Psychology, in Krakow, Poland (June 30-July 4),
(9) Proposal for two conference papers that have been accepted for the conference of the European Association of Social Psychology, in Krakow, Poland (June 30-July 4).
Exploitable results during the reporting period include four guest lectures, a presentation in a workshop with stakeholders, a podcast interview about the InTo work, and the launching of a website for the InTo project (www.intergrouptolerance.eu).
Overview of the results for the final period.
(1) Two large scale data collections in the Netherlands in 2021.
(2) Twenty papers being accepted for open-access publication in international peer-reviewed journals
(3) Three papers submitted and under review with international peer-reviewed journals
(4) A book monograph has been written that discusses and summarizes the work done for the InTo project.
(5) A commentary has been published in Scientific American: "The U.S. needs tolerance more than unity".
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-u-s-needs-tolerance-more-than-unity/(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre) (6) Two animated videos have been developed that can be used for illustrating and highlighting the importance of tolerance for a diverse society (
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iubnKgdo-6EuRUsE0zlyEjDyqkcKl-6d/view(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre)) and the critical role of reciprocity for toleration (
https://drive.google.com/file/d/10tt9ZSw3ad8FA3744xYNg7XrrViDcKiW/view(s’ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre))
(7) Three PhD students have successfully completed and publicly defended their dissertation