Institutional acknowledgement of the chosen trauma in the background of its denial: A field experiment across conflicting groups

Author:

Andrighetto Luca1ORCID,Halabi Samer2,Kosic Ankica3ORCID,Petrović Nebojša4,Prelić Nedim5,Pecini Chiara1,Nadler Arie6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Educational Science University of Genova Genova Italy

2. The Academic College of Tel Aviv Yaffo Tel‐Aviv Israel

3. Department of Social and Developmental Psychology Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

4. Department of Psychology University of Belgrade Belgrade Serbia

5. Department of Psychology and Pedagogy University of Tuzla Tuzla Bosnia and Herzegovina

6. Department of Psychology Tel‐Aviv University Tel‐Aviv Israel

Abstract

AbstractReconciliation research revealed that the institutional acknowledgement of the group's sufferings does not always improve fractured intergroup relations. To get a better understanding of this issue, through a field experiment we explored whether its effectiveness could be dependent on the collective background against which it is provided. That is, we involved citizens (N = 975) from societies entrapped in recent or ongoing conflicts (i.e., Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Palestinian, Israel) and examined the effects of the institutional acknowledgement of a chosen trauma when its denial by the majority (vs. minority) of outgroup members was made salient. Results revealed that the salience of the acknowledgement was effective in increasing the trust towards outgroup representatives. Instead, such an acknowledgement was ineffective in improving people's willingness to reconcile and hope for change, which was mainly dependent on the levels of denial by outgroup members. However, for these latter variables, relevant differences emerged depending on the conflictual versus post‐conflictual context. Implications of our findings for intergroup reconciliation are discussed.

Publisher

Wiley

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