What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers
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Whistleblowing cases that shook intelligence community in the last decade
have something in common. Edward Snowden, Bradley Manning, and Reality Winner are
all members of a single generation – Millennials. We challenge the viewpoint that depicts
this generation as а potential “insider threat.” Millennials do have certain psychological traits
and attitudes that can be related to tendencies towards whistleblowing, but these findings
still do not approve the rhetoric that creates distrust towards the generation. This paper
proposes a shift from the cultural to the socio-psychological level of analysis, with respect
to both cultural and individual characteristics of whistleblowers, but puts more emphasis
on the social dimension. In comprehending recent cases of leaking classified information,
it is not enough to reduce explanation to some individual personality traits or hide behind
an abstraction, such as the concept of generation. To shed more light on the issue, we
introduce ...the concept of the imagined community, such as the open source community,
promoting free Internet and transparency of information and knowledge. Therefore, mental
membership in an imagined community might be more decisive for blowing the whistle
than the global set of values related to the whole generation of Millennials.
Keywords:
Millennials / whistleblowing / leaking / intelligence agencies / imagined communitySource:
Sociološki pregled, 2022, 55, 4, 1674-1695Publisher:
- Beograd: Institut za političke studije
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IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Nikolić, Nemanja AU - Bojić, Ljubiša AU - Jevtović, Ana PY - 2022 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/2630 AB - Whistleblowing cases that shook intelligence community in the last decade have something in common. Edward Snowden, Bradley Manning, and Reality Winner are all members of a single generation – Millennials. We challenge the viewpoint that depicts this generation as а potential “insider threat.” Millennials do have certain psychological traits and attitudes that can be related to tendencies towards whistleblowing, but these findings still do not approve the rhetoric that creates distrust towards the generation. This paper proposes a shift from the cultural to the socio-psychological level of analysis, with respect to both cultural and individual characteristics of whistleblowers, but puts more emphasis on the social dimension. In comprehending recent cases of leaking classified information, it is not enough to reduce explanation to some individual personality traits or hide behind an abstraction, such as the concept of generation. To shed more light on the issue, we introduce the concept of the imagined community, such as the open source community, promoting free Internet and transparency of information and knowledge. Therefore, mental membership in an imagined community might be more decisive for blowing the whistle than the global set of values related to the whole generation of Millennials. PB - Beograd: Institut za političke studije T2 - Sociološki pregled T1 - What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers IS - 4 VL - 55 SP - 1674 EP - 1695 DO - 10.5937/socpreg55-34725 ER -
@article{ author = "Nikolić, Nemanja and Bojić, Ljubiša and Jevtović, Ana", year = "2022", abstract = "Whistleblowing cases that shook intelligence community in the last decade have something in common. Edward Snowden, Bradley Manning, and Reality Winner are all members of a single generation – Millennials. We challenge the viewpoint that depicts this generation as а potential “insider threat.” Millennials do have certain psychological traits and attitudes that can be related to tendencies towards whistleblowing, but these findings still do not approve the rhetoric that creates distrust towards the generation. This paper proposes a shift from the cultural to the socio-psychological level of analysis, with respect to both cultural and individual characteristics of whistleblowers, but puts more emphasis on the social dimension. In comprehending recent cases of leaking classified information, it is not enough to reduce explanation to some individual personality traits or hide behind an abstraction, such as the concept of generation. To shed more light on the issue, we introduce the concept of the imagined community, such as the open source community, promoting free Internet and transparency of information and knowledge. Therefore, mental membership in an imagined community might be more decisive for blowing the whistle than the global set of values related to the whole generation of Millennials.", publisher = "Beograd: Institut za političke studije", journal = "Sociološki pregled", title = "What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers", number = "4", volume = "55", pages = "1674-1695", doi = "10.5937/socpreg55-34725" }
Nikolić, N., Bojić, L.,& Jevtović, A.. (2022). What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers. in Sociološki pregled Beograd: Institut za političke studije., 55(4), 1674-1695. https://doi.org/10.5937/socpreg55-34725
Nikolić N, Bojić L, Jevtović A. What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers. in Sociološki pregled. 2022;55(4):1674-1695. doi:10.5937/socpreg55-34725 .
Nikolić, Nemanja, Bojić, Ljubiša, Jevtović, Ana, "What makes millennials blow the whistle? From cultural to socio-psychological perspectives on whistleblowers" in Sociološki pregled, 55, no. 4 (2022):1674-1695, https://doi.org/10.5937/socpreg55-34725 . .