Contributions to collective works (3)

  1. 1. Wagner-Egger, P., & Nera, K. (2023). Complotisme et extrémisme. In T. Arciszewski (Ed.), Complotisme et extrémisme, Psychologie de l'extrémisme et du terrorisme. De Boeck Supérieur.
  2. 2. Klein, O., Nera, K., & Arnal Bacalao, C. (2021). L'érosion de la démocratie par le complotisme. In F.-B. Huyghe (Ed.), Méfiance et crédulité des foules, Vol. 5. Le virus du faux (pp. 6-10). Institut de recherches internationales et stratégiques.
  3. 3. Klein, O., & Nera, K. (2020). Social Psychology of Conspiracy Theories. In M. Butter & P. Knight (Eds.), Handbook of Conspiracy Theories (pp. 121-134). London: Routledge.
  4.   Peer-reviewed journal articles (17)

  5. 1. Leveaux, S. S., Nera, K., Pierre, F., & Klein, P. (2022). Defining and Explaining Conspiracy Theories: Comparing the Lay Representations of Conspiracy Believers and Non-Believers. Journal of Social and Political Psychology.
  6. 2. Nera, K., & Schöpfer, C. S. (2023). What is So Special about Conspiracy Theories? Conceptually Distinguishing Beliefs in Conspiracy Theories from Conspiracy Beliefs in Psychological Research. Theory & psychology. doi:10.1177/09593543231155891
  7. 3. Van Oost, P., Nera, K., & Yzerbyt, V. V. (2025). Do Anti-Egalitarians Report Increased Support for People with Language Difficulties when Exposed to Gender-Fair Language? Psychologica belgica, 65(1), 132-145. doi:10.5334/pb.1342
  8. 4. Nera, K., Douglas, K. M., Bertin, P., Delouvée, S., & Klein, O. (2024). Conspiracy Beliefs and the Perception of Intergroup Inequalities. Personality & social psychology bulletin. doi:10.1177/01461672241279085
  9. 5. Nera, K., Bertin, P., Biddlestone, M., Tagand, M., & Klein, O. (2024). Are conspiracy theory believers drawn to conspiratorial explanations, alternatives explanations, or both? Journal of experimental social psychology, 115, 104640. doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2024.104640
  10. 6. Nera, K., Procop, I., & Klein, O. (2023). Comparing the ideological correlates of anti-government and anti-Roma conspiracy beliefs in Romania. Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology, 17, 183449092311622. doi:10.1177/18344909231162276
  11. 7. Nera, K., Bertin, P., & Klein, O. (2022). Conspiracy theories as opportunistic attributions of power. Current opinion in psychology, 47, 101381. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2022.101381
  12. 8. Nera, K., Jetten, J., Biddlestone, M., & Klein, O. (2022). ‘Who wants to silence us’? Perceived discrimination of conspiracy theory believers increases ‘conspiracy theorist’ identification when it comes from powerholders – But not from the general public. British journal of social psychology. doi:10.1111/bjso.12536
  13. 9. Roblain, A., Gale, J., Abboud, S., Arnal Bacalao, C., Bornand, T., Hanioti Kokkoli, M., Klein, O., Klein, P., Lastrego, S., Licata, L., Mora, Y., Nera, K., Van der Linden, N., Van Oost, P., & Toma, C. (2022). Social control and solidarity during the COVID-19 pandemic: the direct and indirect effects of causal attribution of insufficient compliance through perceived anomie. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 32(5), 963-973. doi:10.1002/casp.2600

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