Emotional belonging and cultural identity: a systematic review of collective emotions among indigenous and minority groups
Margit Julia Guerra-Ayala, Emma Lourdes Durand-Gómez, Edith Cari Checa, Rildo Paul Tapia Condori, Bresia Maryory Abarca Cari

TL;DR
This paper reviews how collective emotions help indigenous and minority groups build identity, resist oppression, and maintain social cohesion.
Contribution
The study systematically identifies eight key emotional mechanisms central to cultural resilience and social justice in marginalized communities.
Findings
Collective emotions like nostalgia, pride, and resilience shape cohesion and resistance in minority groups.
Emotional mechanisms mediate memory and power, influencing cultural resilience and political change.
The study reveals how emotions sustain community life and redefine social justice across contexts.
Abstract
Collective emotions are central to understanding how belonging, identity, and social cohesion are constructed within indigenous, migrant, and minority communities. Beyond individual feelings, they function as cultural and moral frameworks that sustain recognition and collective action. This systematic review addresses the following research question: How do collective emotions contribute to processes of cohesion, resistance, and cultural reconstruction among Indigenous and minority groups across institutional contexts? Following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, this systematic review analyzed empirical and theoretical studies published between 2015 and 2025 in Scopus, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect. Seventy-four studies were included, examining emotions linked to identity, resistance, and social reconstruction across intercultural contexts. The synthesis identified eight dominant emotional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIndigenous Health, Education, and Rights · History of Emotions Research · Participatory Visual Research Methods
