Henri Tajfel, (born June 22, 1919, Włocławek, Pol.—died May 3, 1982, Oxford, Eng.), Polish-born British social psychologist. Born into a Jewish family in Poland, he was a student at the Sorbonne in France when Germany invaded Poland in 1939. A fluent French speaker, he served in the French army, was captured by the invading German forces in 1940, and spent the rest of the war as a prisoner of war. All of his immediate family and most of his friends in Poland were killed in the Holocaust. After the war he spent six years helping to rehabilitate war victims and refugees and to repatriate or resettle them in other countries. Tajfel argued that North American social psychologists were mostly misguided in their pursuit of psychological laws that applied primarily to individuals rather than to groups. In contrast, Europe’s political history and wars demonstrated the need for theoretical constructs that reflect the social, political, and historical context within which social behaviour takes place.
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