How meta-humanization leads to conciliatory attitudes but not intergroup negotiation: The mediating roles of attribution of secondary emotions and blatant dehumanization
Relations between groups are particularly sensitive in post-conflict societies where tensions persist, and reconciliation remains unlikely. The present research investigated whether believing or learning that an outgroup humanizes the ingroup (i.e., meta-humanization) enhances conciliatory attitudes...
        Saved in:
      
    
          | Main Authors: | Islam Borinca, Jasper Van Assche, Yasin Koc | 
|---|---|
| Format: | Article | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | Elsevier
    
        2024-01-01 | 
| Series: | Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology | 
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666622724000194 | 
| Tags: | Add Tag 
      No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
   | 
Similar Items
- 
                
                    Subjugation, Dehumanization, and Resistance:        
                          
 by: Sanjad Azvi, et al.
 Published: (2024-12-01)
- 
                
                    Dispossession and Dehumanization: A Subaltern Study of The Underground Railroad        
                          
 by: Muneeba Sharafat, et al.
 Published: (2024-08-01)
- 
                
                    Imagined otherness fuels blatant dehumanization of outgroups        
                          
 by: Austin van Loon, et al.
 Published: (2024-05-01)
- 
                
                    Why is digital transformation so slow? The shadow of dehumanization 2.0        
                          
 by: Wojciech Czakon, et al.
 Published: (2024-08-01)
- 
                
                    Exploring Conciliatory and Collaborative Methods of Research-Creation with Indigenous Communities        
                          
 by: Aphrodite Salas, et al.
 Published: (2021-11-01)
 
       