# Clique Member Traits, Examples, and Categorization

## Executive summary

Across psychology and sociology, a **clique** is best understood as a **small, relatively dense, interaction-based subgroup** whose members spend disproportionate time with one another, exchange recognition and support, and often draw boundaries against nonmembers. In developmental psychology, cliques are usually distinguished from **crowds**: crowds are larger reputation-based categories such as “jocks,” “brains,” or “populars,” whereas cliques are the smaller face-to-face friendship groups nested within them. In sociology and social network analysis, cliques are treated as especially cohesive subgroups whose power comes from closure, reciprocity, and repeated interaction. Classic work by Dunphy, Hallinan, Moreno, and later network analysts converges on this point even though the level of analysis differs. citeturn19search8turn29view0turn18search2turn18search1

The strongest evidence suggests that clique membership is shaped by a combination of **homophily** and **status dynamics**. Members tend to cluster by demographic similarity, shared activities, and compatible dispositions, but they also sort by power, visibility, and behavioral style. Personality matters: adolescents and young adults preferentially select friends similar in Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Openness, while Extraversion raises the rate of friend selection and Agreeableness raises the likelihood of being selected. At the same time, popularity is not equivalent to being well liked; high-status members often combine prosocial skill with strategic aggression. citeturn3search2turn11search0turn11search1turn4search3turn4search8

A rigorous taxonomy of clique members is therefore better built around **roles in status maintenance and boundary control** than around pop-culture labels. The literature supports at least eight recurring role positions: **core leader, gatekeeper, sociocenter, lieutenant or enforcer, broker or liaison, core supporter, aspirant or peripheral member, and marginalized or sacrificial member**. These roles are not immutable personality types. They are **network positions** that emerge where belonging, identity, prestige, and exclusion interact. Some members move between roles over time as clique hierarchy shifts. citeturn19search8turn22view0turn1search1turn34search0

Empirically, clique life has mixed consequences. It can provide support, identity, and behavioral coordination, but it also intensifies conformity pressure, gossip, rumor transmission, rank competition, exclusion, and vulnerability to mental-health harm when status is low or unstable. Rejection, victimization, and low school-based status are associated with later social anxiety, depressive symptoms, and distress; interventions that restructure peer relations rather than only reprimand individuals tend to work better. Evidence is strongest for school settings, moderate for online groups and workplaces, and much thinner for hobby circles and elite clubs at the level of individual member roles. citeturn12search0turn16search0turn16search1turn35search4turn17search6turn27search2turn17search4

This report argues that the most analytically useful way to study clique members is to treat them as occupying **positions in a bounded prestige-and-belonging system**. Doing so clarifies why similar traits can produce different outcomes. For example, aggression can elevate one member if it is paired with charm and centrality, but marginalize another if it is not. Likewise, quiet observing can signal exclusion in one clique and legitimate peripheral membership in another. citeturn4search8turn4search3turn20search3turn6search1

## Definitions and conceptual boundaries

In the classical sociometric tradition associated with Moreno, the point of studying cliques was to uncover the **hidden structure of attraction, rejection, and subgrouping** inside a larger collectivity. Sociometry treats groups not only as formal organizations but as patterns of preferred and avoided ties; it is concerned with “stars,” isolates, and cohesive subgroups that can be mapped through choices and rejections. citeturn18search2turn18search0

In sociology and mathematical social-network analysis, a clique is often defined more formally as a **maximally complete or near-complete subgraph**, the strongest possible cohesive subgroup. Alba’s graph-theoretic work made explicit that this formal meaning is a sociological attempt to preserve the intuitive idea of a dense and selective subgroup while making it analyzable in larger datasets. That formalization is narrower than everyday usage, but it captures an important point: cliques are not just clusters; they are unusually closed and internally redundant structures. citeturn18search1turn18search3

In developmental psychology, the term is broader and more behaviorally grounded. Hallinan’s classroom research examined the conditions under which friendship choice and clique formation vary, while later adolescence research describes cliques as **exclusive and relatively tight groups of friends with whom adolescents spend most of their time**. Dunphy’s classic fieldwork similarly described adolescent systems in which each crowd consisted of multiple cliques linked by role relations among leaders and followers. citeturn29view0turn21view2turn19search8

A core boundary in the literature is the distinction between **cliques** and **crowds**. Brown and colleagues showed that adolescents care deeply about crowd affiliation, especially in earlier adolescence, because it supplies support, interaction opportunities, and social identity; however, crowds are broader reputational formations, whereas cliques are the smaller groups that structure daily interaction. Dunphy’s work already implied this nested structure by locating cliques inside crowds and crowds inside larger hierarchies. citeturn15search2turn15search0turn19search8

That distinction matters analytically because many traits commonly attributed to “clique members” are actually traits of **high-status crowds** rather than the internal structure of a single clique. School labels such as “populars,” “jocks,” “brains,” “druggies,” “normals,” and “loners” refer to crowd-level categories, not precise role positions inside a tight friendship group. Reviews of adolescent peer-group labels show large recurring categories across studies, but they also show that most schools contain broad “others” or “average” populations that do not map cleanly onto dramatic stereotypes. citeturn15search3turn2search1

The conceptual upshot is that “clique” has at least three legitimate meanings: a **formal cohesive subgraph**, a **small bounded friendship group**, and a **socially recognized exclusive circle**. The rest of this report focuses on the second and third meanings, while drawing on the first to explain why clique roles tend to be powerful: dense closure amplifies visibility, conformity, and punishment. citeturn18search1turn21view2turn3search2

### Definitions across disciplines

| Tradition | Typical unit of analysis | Definition or emphasis | Main implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sociometry | Whole group and interpersonal choices | Hidden structure of attractions, rejections, stars, isolates, and subgroups revealed by choice patterns. citeturn18search2turn18search0 | Clique membership is a measurable relational position, not just a label. |
| Sociology of peer groups | School or local status system | Dense friendship subgroup nested within broader crowds and hierarchies; Dunphy located cliques inside crowds linked by leaders and followers. citeturn19search8turn29view0 | Cliques reproduce local status systems and stratification. |
| Developmental psychology | Small friendship group | Exclusive, tight group of friends with whom adolescents spend most of their time. citeturn21view2 | Clique members are salient sources of support, pressure, and influence. |
| Mathematical social network analysis | Graph or network | Maximally complete or near-complete cohesive subgroup. citeturn18search1turn18academia57 | Closure intensifies coordination, redundancy, and exclusion. |

## Theoretical frameworks for clique membership traits

The first major framework is **homophily**. McPherson, Smith-Lovin, and Cook’s classic review showed that similarity strongly structures friendship, support, information, and co-membership ties across demographic, behavioral, and intrapersonal characteristics. In clique terms, this means members are more likely to resemble one another in age, gender, ethnicity, class markers, activities, attitudes, and style before any explicit hierarchy appears. citeturn3search2

Homophily is not only demographic. Duck’s adolescent friendship study found that established friends shared more similar personal constructs than nonfriend pairs, and Selfhout and colleagues showed that in newly forming late-adolescent networks, more extraverted people chose more friends, more agreeable people were chosen more often, and friendship choices were patterned by similarity in Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Openness. Thus, clique recruitment is partly a **trait-sorting process**. citeturn11search0turn11search1

A second framework is **belonging and attachment**. Baumeister and Leary’s belongingness formulation argues that humans are strongly motivated to form enduring and nonaversive bonds. Brown, Eicher, and Petrie found that younger adolescents especially value crowd and group affiliation for emotional support, friendship, and easier social interaction, and Prentice, Miller, and Lightdale distinguished **common-bond groups**, based on attachment to members, from **common-identity groups**, based on attachment to the group as a category. Many cliques combine both: members bond to specific people and to what the clique represents. citeturn12search0turn15search2turn12search1

A third framework is **social identity and categorization**. Even when explicit clique studies do not invoke Tajfel and Turner directly, the mechanism is evident: members seek positive distinctiveness through favorable in-group comparison, and boundaries become meaningful because identity is relational rather than purely individual. Brown and Lohr found that adolescents’ self-esteem tracked the status location of their peer-group affiliation, indicating that “who we are” becomes entangled with “what our group counts for.” citeturn15search0turn12search1

A fourth framework is **status competition and resource control**. Popularity research shows that peer systems distinguish between being liked and being regarded as popular. Children describe popular peers as socially active and attractive, but also as potentially antisocial; Cillessen and Rose summarize evidence that some high-status youth are genuinely prosocial while others are visible, emulated, and effective despite aggressive or manipulative conduct. Rodkin and colleagues similarly identified both prosocial and antisocial configurations among popular boys. In clique terms, this means high-status members often combine charm with coercive leverage. citeturn4search0turn4search3turn4search8

A fifth framework is **network closure and brokerage**. Dense closure creates bonding capital, trust, and norm enforcement, whereas bridging ties create access to outside information and opportunities. Dunphy’s leader and sociocenter roles already hinted at differentiation inside adolescent groups, and Ennett and Bauman later identified clique members, liaisons, and isolates as distinct social positions in adolescent networks. In elite and organizational settings, the same logic appears in distinctions between bonded inner circles and cross-group connectors. citeturn19search8turn1search1turn8search0

A sixth framework is **communication as boundary work**. Gossip, selective disclosure, teasing, rumor, reaction testing, and silence are not incidental. They help members assess loyalty, enforce norms, and place others in rank order. Research on adolescent gossip shows that status shapes how gossip is used, while relational-aggression work demonstrates that exclusion and rumor spreading are network-dependent strategies rather than random hostility. citeturn13search2turn13search7turn13search0

### Trait domains that recur in clique membership

| Trait domain | Strongest recurring findings | Representative sources |
|---|---|---|
| Personality | Extraversion predicts selecting more friends; Agreeableness predicts being selected; friendships cluster by similarity in Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Openness. citeturn11search1 | Duck 1975; Selfhout et al. 2010. citeturn11search0turn11search1 |
| Social status | Popularity and likability are distinct; perceived popularity can coexist with aggression and manipulation. citeturn4search3turn23search7 | LaFontana & Cillessen 2002; Cillessen & Rose 2005. citeturn4search0turn4search3 |
| Roles | Leader, sociocenter, liaison, isolate, and within-clique hierarchy recur across studies. citeturn19search8turn1search1turn22view0 | Dunphy 1963; Ennett & Bauman 1996; Pattiselanno et al. 2015. citeturn19search8turn1search1turn22view0 |
| Motivations | Belonging, identity, support, conformity management, and status striving are central. citeturn12search0turn15search2turn15search0 | Baumeister & Leary 1995; Brown et al. 1986; Brown & Lohr 1987. citeturn12search0turn15search2turn15search0 |
| Demographics | Similarity in race, gender, class, and other attributes strongly structures ties. citeturn3search2 | McPherson et al. 2001; Hallinan 1979. citeturn3search2turn29view0 |
| Communication style | Gossip, exclusion, rumor, and discursive norm setting are recurrent mechanisms. citeturn13search2turn13search6turn13search0 | Aikins et al. 2017; Guendouzi 2020; Neal 2009. citeturn13search2turn13search6turn13search0 |

## Empirical findings and key studies

Classic adolescent sociology established that cliques are not random groupings. Dunphy’s field investigation found multiple hierarchies of adolescent groups, each hierarchy composed of crowds, and each crowd composed of two to four cliques. He also identified two mutually supportive central roles in the crowd system: the **leader**, who pushes developmental pace, and the **sociocenter**, who relieves tension and sustains affiliation. That remains one of the clearest original statements that cliques contain differentiated member functions rather than homogeneous friendship. citeturn19search8turn19search6

Hallinan’s classroom studies showed that the number and size of cliques vary with structural conditions such as class size and classroom organization. This is important because it means clique formation is not simply an expression of fixed adolescent “tribalism”; environmental architecture changes the number of isolates, cross-sex ties, and clique density. citeturn29view0

Brown’s work shifted attention from pure structure to adolescent meaning. In his studies of crowd affiliation and self-esteem, younger adolescents emphasized support and interaction as reasons to affiliate, while older adolescents complained more about conformity demands. Brown and Lohr also found that self-esteem among crowd members tracked the status of one’s group location. Status is therefore not just symbolic ornamentation; it is psychologically consequential. citeturn15search2turn15search0

Peer-status research further sharpened this picture. Coie, Dodge, and Coppotelli’s two-dimensional model distinguished popular, rejected, neglected, controversial, and average statuses, and linked social preference to cooperativeness and supportiveness while connecting rejection to disruptiveness and aggression. Meta-analytic work later confirmed that popular children show a broad competence profile, whereas rejected children are more likely to show aggression, withdrawal, low sociability, and lower cognitive performance indicators. citeturn14search2turn14search4

Research on popularity complicated the older assumption that high status is simply prosocial. LaFontana and Cillessen found that children associated being liked with prosociality and being disliked with antisociality, but associated **perceived popularity** with both prosocial and antisocial conduct. Rodkin and colleagues similarly identified “model” and “tough” configurations among popular boys, demonstrating that public prestige can be reached through different behavioral packages. citeturn4search0turn4search8

Ethnographic work on girls’ peer culture showed how these dynamics feel from the inside. Eder’s “cycle of popularity” found that friendships with popular girls were routes to status, yet popular girls’ avoidance of lower-status peers generated resentment and eventual dislike. Merten’s work on “meanness” likewise analyzed a clique of girls who were simultaneously mean and popular, tying emotional hurt to competition and popularity rather than treating aggression as peripheral deviance. citeturn23search0turn23search2turn10search3turn10search2

More recent network research indicates that hierarchy also matters **inside** the clique, not only between cliques. Pattiselanno and colleagues found that within-clique status structure moderated how strongly status related to aggression and prosociality, especially in same-gender cliques. Closson similarly found that aggression toward clique members was associated with within-clique dominance, and that dominant adolescents who combined aggressive and prosocial behavior could reap the greatest social rewards. citeturn22view0turn20search3

Studies of centrality and deviance add an important corrective. Bagwell and colleagues found that rejected preadolescents were less central, belonged to smaller cliques, and often clustered with other low-status peers; aggression, however, was associated with centrality in **deviant** peer cliques. Kreager, Rulison, and Moody later showed that delinquent adolescent groups were generally less cohesive and less central to school networks than nondelinquent groups. So deviant cliques exist, but they are not always the dominant or most integrated ones. citeturn31search0turn31search4turn32search1

Influence processes operate both at the broader network level and at the clique level. Ennett and Bauman identified clique members, liaisons, and isolates in high-school friendship networks. Lodder and colleagues later showed that adolescents selected friends similar in victimization and influenced one another over time; for boys, average clique victimization predicted later individual victimization. That finding is especially important because it shows that clique membership can transmit not only prestige but also vulnerability. citeturn1search1turn21view2

Communication-based studies show that clique processes are enacted conversationally. Observational work by Aikins and colleagues linked gossip functionality to popularity; Neal’s relational-aggression research tied exclusion and rumor spreading to network position; Guendouzi showed that gossip in adolescent girls’ talk serves to negotiate norms, values, and identity. Clique communication is therefore best understood as **social regulation**, not just chatter. citeturn13search2turn13search7turn13search0turn13search6

Outside schools, the same mechanisms recur in altered form. In workplaces, informal social and communication networks shape knowledge sharing and knowledge hiding, with closed triads facilitating some forms of harmful withholding and bridging positions sometimes mitigating them. In online communities, attachment may be member-based or identity-based, and moderators have disproportionate influence over whether belonging is strengthened through participatory governance or eroded by rigid control. In elite clubs, affiliations reproduce cohesion and social closure among already advantaged actors, often reinforcing inequality in representation and access. citeturn25search2turn25search4turn28search0turn17search4turn8search2turn8search0turn7search3

### Selected landmark studies

| Study | Context | Core contribution | Why it matters for member categorization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moreno, *sociometry* tradition | Groups in general | Mapped hidden attractions, repulsions, stars, and isolates. citeturn18search2turn18search0 | Established that members occupy relational positions. |
| Dunphy 1963 | Urban adolescents | Located cliques inside crowds; identified leader and sociocenter roles. citeturn19search8 | Earliest strong evidence for differentiated clique roles. |
| Hallinan 1979 | Classrooms | Showed structure and setting alter clique number and size. citeturn29view0 | Member types depend partly on ecology, not just personality. |
| Brown, Eicher, and Petrie 1986 | Adolescents | Group affiliation serves support, friendship, and interaction functions, especially earlier in adolescence. citeturn15search2 | Grounds motivational analysis of clique joining. |
| Brown and Lohr 1987 | School crowds | Group status linked to adolescent self-esteem. citeturn15search0 | Explains why members defend clique prestige. |
| Coie, Dodge, and Coppotelli 1982 | School peers | Distinguished sociometric status types. citeturn14search2 | Supplies baseline categories for marginal, controversial, rejected members. |
| Rodkin et al. 2000 | Elementary boys | Popular youth include prosocial and antisocial subtypes. citeturn4search8 | Justifies separating leader from enforcer. |
| Eder 1985; Merten 1997 | Junior high girls | Popularity can depend on exclusion, meanness, and status conflict. citeturn23search0turn10search3 | Shows how gatekeeping and relational aggression work. |
| Bagwell et al. 2000 | Preadolescents | Rejected youth were less central and in smaller, lower-status cliques. citeturn31search0 | Supports peripheral and marginalized member roles. |
| Pattiselanno et al. 2015 | Adolescents | Internal clique hierarchy moderates aggression and prosociality. citeturn22view0 | Demonstrates that member roles depend on within-clique rank. |
| Lodder et al. 2016 | Adolescents | Selection and influence in victimization differ across network and clique levels. citeturn21view2 | Shows clique effects can amplify risk. |

## Taxonomy of clique member types

The taxonomy below is **synthetic**: it is not lifted intact from a single paper, but inferred from recurring empirically documented role positions and hierarchy patterns across the literature. That is a strength and a limitation. The strength is analytic clarity across contexts; the limitation is that studies use different labels, ages, and methods, so no universal nomenclature exists. citeturn30search7turn22view0turn1search1turn19search8

### Comparative taxonomy

| Type | Definition | Core traits | Typical behaviors | Likely motivations | Social function | Power and conflict role | Main empirical anchors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Core leader** | Highest-visibility member who sets pace, agenda, or image for the clique | Social competence, visibility, low shyness; often some aggression plus charm | Initiates plans, defines norms, symbolizes clique identity | Prestige, control, identity leadership, belonging | Coordinates action and status display | Central power holder; may stabilize or dominate | Dunphy leader role; Zhou et al. 2024; Cillessen & Rose 2005. citeturn19search8turn34search0turn4search3 |
| **Gatekeeper** | Member who manages inclusion, access, and symbolic boundaries | High social perception, vigilance, evaluative authority | Decides who is “in,” restricts invitations, polices style and allegiance | Protecting clique purity and rank | Boundary maintenance | Primary inclusion/exclusion agent; conflict escalator | Adler & Adler 1995; Eder 1985; Merten 1997. citeturn30search6turn23search0turn10search3 |
| **Sociocenter** | Warm, humorous, morale-preserving member who sustains cohesion | Outgoing, affiliative, tension-reducing | Jokes, smooths conflict, keeps group interaction pleasant | Affection, centrality, harmony | Emotional glue | Often influential without formal rank | Dunphy sociocenter role. citeturn19search8turn19search6 |
| **Lieutenant or enforcer** | High-status ally who protects the hierarchy and enacts sanctions | Dominance, strategic aggression, loyalty to core | Gossip, exclusion, intimidation, norm enforcement | Status maintenance, alliance with leaders | Hands-on control | Conflict entrepreneur; may bully rivals or weak insiders | Rodkin et al. 2000; Closson 2009; Pattiselanno et al. 2015. citeturn4search8turn20search3turn22view0 |
| **Broker or liaison** | Member with ties across groups; less closed than core members | Social range, adaptability, perspective-taking | Moves between groups, shares news, links networks | Opportunity, flexibility, access to information | Bridge-building and diffusion | Can reduce closure or become an intelligence channel | Ennett & Bauman 1996; Cornwell & Dokshin 2014. citeturn1search1turn8search0 |
| **Core supporter** | Reliable, accepted insider who reinforces norms without dominating | Conscientious, agreeable, dependable | Shows up, endorses leaders, performs expected rituals | Security, reciprocity, stable belonging | Reproduction of clique routine | Usually low conflict, medium power | Baumeister & Leary 1995; Selfhout et al. 2010. citeturn12search0turn11search1 |
| **Aspirant or peripheral member** | Adjacent member with partial access and lower security | Monitoring, conformity sensitivity, impression management | Copies style, seeks invitations, avoids dissent | Mobility, validation, fear of exclusion | Expands audience and labor pool | High vulnerability; may align upward aggressively | Bagwell et al. 2000; Brown et al. 1986; Adler & Adler 1995. citeturn31search0turn15search2turn30search6 |
| **Marginalized or sacrificial member** | Insider used as low-rank reference point or periodic target | Low status, dependency, weak support | Receives jokes, blame, exclusion threats, unstable inclusion | Retaining any belonging at all | Provides contrast that stabilizes hierarchy | Frequent conflict recipient; at risk for victimization | Adler & Adler 1995; Bagwell et al. 2000; Lodder et al. 2016. citeturn30search6turn31search0turn21view2 |

### Mermaid diagram of clique relationships

```mermaid
flowchart TD
    L[Core leader]
    G[Gatekeeper]
    S[Sociocenter]
    E[Lieutenant or enforcer]
    C[Core supporters]
    B[Broker or liaison]
    P[Aspirant or peripheral member]
    M[Marginalized member]
    O[Outsiders or rival groups]

    L --> G
    L --> E
    L --> S
    L --> C
    G --> P
    G -. admits or excludes .-> O
    E -. sanctions .-> P
    E -. targets .-> M
    S --> C
    S --> P
    B <--> L
    B <--> O
    P --> C
    M -. unstable belonging .-> C
```

This diagram is a stylized synthesis of recurrent role relations in clique research, especially the leader–sociocenter distinction, later work on hierarchy and aggression, and network studies of liaisons and peripheral members. It should be read as a heuristic, not as a universal life cycle. citeturn19search8turn22view0turn1search1

## Contextual examples and observable indicators

Because the literature is uneven across settings, the examples in the table below are **literature-grounded composite examples** rather than named individual case studies. Each example is anchored in empirical work from the relevant context, but the member labels are synthesized for comparison. citeturn30search7turn28search0turn27search2turn8search2

| Type | Observable indicators | School clique example | Workplace clique example | Online or social media example | Hobby or interest-group example | Elite or social-club example |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Core leader** | Others follow scheduling cues; receives high visibility; sets aesthetic or behavioral tone | The girl or boy whose lunch table, invitations, and dating links define local prestige. Eder and Merten describe status-bearing popular members in exactly this way. citeturn23search0turn10search3 | Informal office hub around whom lunch, side conversations, and information requests cluster; knowledge flows often orient around such central actors. citeturn25search2turn27search2 | Founder or lead moderator whose norms shape participation and community feel. citeturn17search3turn17search4 | Veteran organizer whose event calendar and competence define the group’s “real” center; consistent with serious-leisure commitment structures. citeturn7search0 | Club insider whose affiliations anchor others’ access to status and networking opportunities. citeturn8search2turn7search3 |
| **Gatekeeper** | Controls invites, access to channels, seating, or who gets introduced | Popular member who decides who can sit with the group or attend parties. citeturn30search6turn23search2 | Coworker who decides who is included in informal meetings, lunch circles, or knowledge-sharing loops. citeturn24search3turn25search2 | Moderator or senior member who approves posts, enforces norms, or quietly freezes out newcomers. citeturn17search3turn17search4 | Club officer who grants stage time, turns, visibility, or newcomer legitimacy. Inference from serious-leisure role differentiation. citeturn7search0turn12search1 | Sponsoring member who can introduce or stall candidates and preserve closure. citeturn8search2turn7search3 |
| **Sociocenter** | Humor, repair talk, emotional check-ins, high informal approachability | The joke-teller who keeps a tense group fun even if not top-ranked. citeturn19search8turn19search6 | The morale-keeper who keeps a clique warm and cohesive without holding formal authority; an inference consistent with bonding social capital. citeturn27search2 | Highly recognizable member whose friendly replies make the community feel alive. citeturn17search4turn28search0 | The member who welcomes people, runs rituals, and makes events emotionally sticky. citeturn7search0 | The convivial face of a private circle who makes exclusivity feel hospitable to insiders. Inference from club cohesion research. citeturn8search0 |
| **Lieutenant or enforcer** | Spreads reputational signals; publicly backs leader; sanctions deviants | Popular-but-aggressive member who spreads rumors or excludes challengers. citeturn4search8turn20search3turn13search0 | Clique loyalist who withholds information or socially punishes nonmembers. citeturn25search4turn24search2 | Senior contributor who dogpiles dissenters or uses rules strategically. citeturn17search3turn17search4 | Experienced member who belittles novices or guards prestige through competence displays; inference. citeturn7search0 | Inner-circle loyalist who protects old-status norms and reputational hierarchies. citeturn8search2 |
| **Broker or liaison** | Maintains meaningful ties across groups; carries news or opportunities | Student with one foot in several cliques; Ennett and Bauman identified liaisons as a distinct pattern. citeturn1search1 | Employee who spans departments and reduces information bottlenecks. citeturn27search6turn25search4 | Cross-community member who links Discord servers, subreddits, or fandom niches. Identity–bond theory predicts such bridges matter for growth. citeturn28search0 | Organizer who connects adjacent subcultures or clubs and imports ideas. citeturn7search0 | Elite affiliate whose multiple club memberships integrate otherwise separate circles. citeturn8search0turn8search2 |
| **Core supporter** | Reliable attendance, low drama, norm reinforcement | Stable insider who is accepted but not agenda-setting. citeturn12search0turn15search2 | Trusted colleague who keeps the clique functioning and shares selectively within it. citeturn25search2 | Regular poster who upholds community tone and rewards compliant behavior. citeturn17search4 | Dependable member who does routine work that sustains the club. citeturn7search0 | Club regular who maintains ritual continuity and insider trust. citeturn8search0 |
| **Aspirant or peripheral member** | Watches for cues, imitates style, seeks proximity, rarely defines norms | Lower-centrality member of a desired clique; rejected or lower-status youth are often less central and more dependent. citeturn31search0 | New hire orbiting an established social cluster for mentorship, protection, or access. citeturn24search3turn27search0 | New user who comments carefully, tests tone, and seeks recognition; often overlaps with novice participation before fuller commitment. citeturn6search1turn28search0 | Beginner in a high-commitment hobby group learning whether they can “count” as a real member. citeturn7search0 | Candidate member depending on sponsorship and signs of fit. citeturn8search2 |
| **Marginalized or sacrificial member** | Frequently teased, left uncertain, invited inconsistently, easy target in conflict | Member kept in but periodically cut down, as Adler and Adler describe. citeturn30search6 | Employee tolerated socially but excluded from the most useful informal exchanges; workplace ostracism research fits this profile. citeturn24search1turn24search3 | User who is allowed in but ignored, corrected, or publicly disciplined more than others. citeturn17search3turn6search1 | Hobby participant included instrumentally but denied recognition or central opportunities; inference. citeturn7search0 | Lower-prestige affiliate present at events but without real access to elite closure. citeturn8search2turn7search3 |

A practical identification rule follows from this table: do not infer member type from one behavior. A person who jokes a lot is not necessarily a sociocenter, and a highly active moderator is not necessarily the leader. Member typing becomes credible only when the same person shows a **persistent combination** of centrality, boundary work, alliance pattern, and conflict role across time. That caution is consistent with status research showing that popularity, liking, dominance, and centrality are related but distinct constructs. citeturn4search3turn23search7turn20search3

## Implications for group dynamics, inclusion, mental health, leadership, and interventions

Clique organization affects group dynamics in at least four ways. First, closure increases trust and predictability for insiders. Second, it channels influence and norm enforcement more efficiently than looser friendship structures. Third, it sharpens status competition, especially when many members are vying for roughly similar prestige. Fourth, it creates durable outsiders, either by explicit exclusion or by making entry too costly and uncertain. Hot status competition is especially likely where internal hierarchy is shallow or inverted, because rivals are close enough in rank to threaten one another. citeturn22view0turn3search2turn21view2

The inclusion–exclusion consequences are substantial. Adler and Adler’s work depicts clique life as cyclical inclusion and exclusion, not a simple binary. Lodder and colleagues show that clique-level victimization climates can shape later individual victimization, and workplace ostracism research indicates that exclusion is not merely unpleasant but a consequential form of mistreatment with broad antecedents and outcomes. In elite clubs, exclusion works less through playground drama and more through sponsorship norms, affiliational closure, and unequal access to advantageous networks. citeturn30search6turn21view2turn24search3turn8search2turn8search0

Mental-health implications are strongest for low-status or unstable positions. Reviews and meta-analyses show that peer rejection, peer victimization, and poor friendship quality prospectively relate to social anxiety and depression in adolescence. Separate work on school-based subjective social status finds that peer, scholastic, and sports status dimensions are more strongly associated with adolescent health and psychological distress than objective socioeconomic status in some school-based samples. That fits clique theory well: the psychosocial “stakes” of local rank are often more immediate than broader class standing during adolescence. citeturn16search0turn16search1turn35search4turn35search7

Leadership implications are equally important. Peer-group leaders are not always the most academically successful or morally prosocial members. Recent longitudinal work in Chinese early adolescents found that peer-group leadership was fluid but hierarchical, and that higher social competence, higher aggression, and lower shyness increased the likelihood of becoming a group leader. This converges with classic findings that prestige can be produced through mixed repertoires rather than uniformly admirable behavior. Interventions that assume leaders are simply “good role models” therefore misdiagnose many cliques. citeturn34search0turn4search3turn4search8

The intervention literature suggests that **relationship restructuring** is more promising than purely individual punishment. In schools, cooperative learning trials show that improving positive peer relations and affective empathy reduces bullying. This is consistent with the idea that clique harm emerges from network conditions and status incentives, not only from individual pathology. By contrast, anti-bullying efforts that ignore the social rewards of aggression are more likely to fail, particularly when aggressive high-status members gain prestige from their conduct. citeturn17search6turn17search0turn33search0

In workplaces, participatory organizational interventions can strengthen horizontal and vertical workplace social capital, suggesting that redesigning interaction structures can blunt clique-like exclusion. Online, participatory governance and peer-enforced norms appear more conducive to a strong sense of community than formal control alone, and moderators who are genuine community participants are perceived more favorably. These findings imply that healthy clique-like bonding requires **legible, participatory, bounded governance** rather than opaque insider domination. citeturn27search2turn17search4turn17academia48

For practical diagnosis, three indicators matter most. A clique is moving from healthy cohesion toward unhealthy closure when **entry becomes opaque**, **information or opportunities are hoarded**, and **conflict is managed by reputational attack instead of open repair**. When those three converge, the gatekeeper and enforcer roles are usually becoming stronger relative to the sociocenter and broker roles. That pattern predicts both exclusion and declining collective adaptability. citeturn25search4turn24search3turn13search0turn13search2

## Limitations and open questions

The evidence base is richest for **school-age adolescents** and substantially thinner for adult friendship cliques, workplaces, hobby circles, and elite clubs at the level of individual member roles. Many of the cross-context examples in this report therefore rely on **careful theoretical transfer** rather than one-to-one empirical role catalogues. That is why the taxonomy should be treated as an analytic scaffold, not a diagnostic manual. citeturn30search7turn27search0turn8search2

Methodologically, studies vary in how they identify cliques. Some use peer nominations, some use network algorithms, some use ethnography, and some use reputational crowd labels. These methods do not always pick out the same social object. A mathematically dense subgroup, a self-identified friend group, and an ethnographically recognized “inner circle” may overlap only partially. citeturn18search1turn31search0turn30search7

A second limitation is construct contamination. Popularity, likability, dominance, leadership, and centrality are often correlated but not identical. Many public conversations about cliques confuse them, and some empirical literatures do too. Any future taxonomy would improve if studies simultaneously measured **status**, **affection**, **network centrality**, **behavioral repertoire**, and **role recognition by peers**. citeturn4search3turn23search7turn35search7

A third open question concerns historical change. The basic mechanisms of closure, brokerage, gossip, and gatekeeping seem robust, but digital platforms alter visibility, persistence, scale, and moderator power. It remains unresolved how far offline clique taxonomies transfer to semi-public, algorithmically sorted communities in which a person can be central in one channel, peripheral in another, and anonymous in a third. Existing identity–bond and governance work points in promising directions, but the literature is still fragmentary. citeturn28search0turn17search3turn17search4

A final open question is normative. Not all cliques are bad. Many supply belonging, support, skill development, and social capital. The problem is not clique existence per se, but the **balance between bonding and closure**. Future research would benefit from specifying when tightly bonded groups become developmentally protective communities and when they become exclusionary status machines. citeturn12search0turn7search0turn8search0turn27search5