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Beyond comparisons: The complexity and context‐dependency of collective victim beliefs

Authors :
Johanna Ray Vollhardt
Zsolt P. Szabó
Andrew McNeill
Eliana Hadjiandreou
Mikołaj Winiewski
Source :
European Journal of Social Psychology. 51:1138-1157
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Social psychological research on collective victimhood has focused on just a few ways in which people think about the ingroup's victimization that imply certain assumptions and limit our understanding of collective victim beliefs. Additionally, different historical and sociopolitical contexts may make different collective victim beliefs relevant. This article examines collective victim beliefs expressed in open-ended survey responses among six different groups: Northern Irish participants, Greek Cypriots, Hungarians, Poles, Jewish Americans, and Armenian Americans (N = 638). Qualitative content analysis revealed five broader categories with several collective victim beliefs each. General appraisals of the ingroup's collective victimization entailed centrality of ingroup victimization versus defocusing victimhood. More specific appraisals included context-specific characteristics of the ingroup's victimization, perceptions of the perpetrator group (attributions of blame), and perceptions of other victim groups (comparative victim beliefs, including rejecting comparisons). The findings extend and challenge commonly studied collective victim beliefs, and propose novel theoretical directions.

Details

ISSN :
10990992 and 00462772
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Social Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0bb184db175561643e84d739953d5b41
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2802