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 (18)

  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. Nera, K., Douglas, K. M., Bertin, P., & Klein, O. (2025). Does Being Confronted With Internal Attributions for an Ingroup’s Sufferings Foster the Endorsement of Conspiracy Theories? Collabra: Psychology, 11(1). doi:10.1525/collabra.147339
  8. 4. Van Oost, P., Nera, K., & Yzerbyt, 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
  9. 5. 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
  10. 6. 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
  11. 7. 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
  12. 8. 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
  13. 9. 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

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