All victims have something to say: the differential impact of victims’ narratives on intergroup forgiveness

Pablo Castro-Abril, Nekane Basabe, Wilson López-López, Saioa Telletxea, Darío Páez

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Victims’ testimonies have emerged as an interesting tool for generating changes in societies that are seeking to emerge from a violent conflict. However, victims are not a homogeneous group and their stances regarding the perpetrators can different according to whether they accept or reject intergroup forgiveness processes, as was the case of J. Améry, a writer and essayist who survived the Holocaust. In this article, we inquire into the impact of victims’ testimonies on attitudes towards intergroup forgiveness in Spain (N = 274). An experimental study with three conditions was designed using victims’ testimonies that were favourable (Condition 1) and unfavourable (Condition 2) to intergroup forgiveness, along with a condition with statistical data on violence (Condition 0). The results show a differential impact on attitudes based on the victim’s testimony, in addition to emotional activation that is not inherently related to attitudes in favour of forgiveness but instead to the victim’s attitude towards that process.
Translated title of the contributionTodas las víctimas tienen algo que decir: el impacto diferencial de las narrativas de víctimas en el perdón intergrupal
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)219-235
JournalRevista de Psicologia Social
Volume39
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 01 May 2024

Keywords

  • intergroup forgiveness
  • victims
  • testimonies
  • collective violence

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