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      • In hierarchical relationships—e.g., employer‐employee, parent‐child, teacher‐student—social rank is understood and bolstered by social norms. In contrast, symmetric relations—e.g., friend, neighbor, classmate, or coworker—are by definition equitable. One party can’t claim dominance over the other.
      www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/after-service/202010/the-upper-hand-when-does-social-status-lead-conflict
  1. Jan 10, 2022 · As we will show, despite the constraints imposed on dominance by norms, social fluidity, or specific cultural products and its frequent subordination to prestige, dominance continues to play a pervasive role in human social life.

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      As we will show, despite the constraints imposed on...

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      hood for dominance status to coexist alongside prestige...

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      Researchers have expressed repeated frustration with the...

  2. In real-life social settings, 1-2 year old children display dyadic dominance relations themselves, from which members of a group can be ranked along a linear hierarchy (Strayer & Trudel, 1984).

  3. Jan 10, 2022 · Across species, social hierarchies are often governed by dominance relations. In humans, where there are multiple culturally valued axes of distinction, social hierarchies can take a variety of forms and need not rest on dominance relations. Consequently, humans navigate multiple domains of status, i.e. relative standing.

  4. Aug 6, 2010 · Self-reported dominance was associated with lower levels of genuine self-esteem, social acceptance, and agreeableness, and higher levels of self-aggrandizing narcissism, aggression,...

    • Scott Barry Kaufman
  5. Jan 10, 2022 · We identify five broad questions at the individual, dyadic and group levels, exploring the causes and consequences of individual changes in rank, the dynamics underlying dyadic dominance relationships, and the origins and impacts of social instability. Although challenges remain, we propose avenues for overcoming them.

  6. Aug 22, 2017 · One possible explanation, scientists say, may lie in what’s known as Social Dominance Theory, the idea that human societies are organized in group-based social hierarchies in which some enjoy greater access to resources and opportunities than others.

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  8. Sep 1, 2023 · We investigated if dominance is associated with increased meaning in life via enhanced perceptions of social support and belongingess independently of other meaning sources, self-enhancement, and dark, manipulative tendencies that chacterise some dominant individuals.

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