Associations between perceived injustice, unforgiveness, and psychological well-being among ex-communicants
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Published:2020-04-01
Issue:6
Volume:37
Page:1991-2011
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ISSN:0265-4075
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Container-title:Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
Author:
Boon Susan D.1ORCID,
Brown Jac2
Affiliation:
1. University of Calgary, Canada
2. Macquarie University, Australia
Abstract
Through the experiences of individuals excommunicated from a small religious sect ( N = 95), we explored the association between perceptions of injustice resulting from chronic social exclusion and reduced psychological well-being. We also tested whether unforgiveness toward the church—particularly a tendency for participants to experience lingering negative affect and rumination about their treatment by the church—mediates this association. Analysis of responses to an online survey about participants’ experiences of chronic ostracism revealed the predicted association between perceived injustice and both anxiety and loneliness but not depression and supported our prediction that emotional-ruminative unforgiveness explains this association. Our findings also call into question whether the psychological outcomes of prolonged social exclusion are necessarily chronic and debilitating.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Communication,Social Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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