Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Wesleyan University Middletown Connecticut USA
2. Department of Psychology The University of Texas at Arlington Arlington Texas USA
3. Department of Psychology Davidson College Davidson North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractThe purpose of this research was to investigate whether multicultural personality orientation as measured by the Multicultural Personality Questionnaire short form (MPQ) predicted intergroup forgiveness, decisions to forgive, revenge intentions, and avoidance intentions in the context of U.S. political conflict. We conducted three replicated studies across three different political, contextual samples. Study 1 was collected from a majority liberal, majority People of Color sample (N = 301), Study 2 was a majority liberal, majority White sample (N = 125), and Study 3 was a majority conservative, majority White sample (N = 160). Participants in these studies completed items from the MPQ short form and read a hypothetical political violence event committed against their political ingroup by a political outgroup. Overall, we found that the cultural empathy subscale of the MPQ short form was a consistent positive predictor of forgiveness even in the presence of other relevant predictors such as strength of ingroup identification and political ideology. We also performed a mini meta‐analysis across our three collected studies which further supported cultural empathy as a consistent positive predictor of intergroup forgiveness.