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   Observer Perceptions of Moral Obligations in Groups With a History of Victimization  
   
نویسنده warner r.h. ,branscombe n.r.
منبع personality and social psychology bulletin - 2012 - دوره : 38 - شماره : 7 - صفحه:882 -894
چکیده    The authors investigated when observers assign contemporary group members moral obligations based on their group's victimization history. in experiment 1,americans perceived israelis as obligated to help sudanese genocide victims and as guiltworthy for not helping if reminded of the holocaust and its descendants were linked to this history. in experiment 2,participants perceived israelis as more obligated to help and guiltworthy for not helping when the holocaust was presented as a unique victimization event compared with when genocide was presented as pervasive. experiments 3 and 4 replicated the effects of experiment 1 with cambodians as the victimized group. experiment 5 demonstrated that participants perceived cambodians as having more obligations under high just world threat compared with low just world threat. perceiving victimized groups as incurring obligations is one just world restoration method of providing meaning to collective injustice. © 2012 by the society for personality and social psychology,inc.
کلیدواژه Cambodian genocide; collective guilt assignment; Holocaust; intergroup relations; moral obligations; victimization history
آدرس department of psychology,saint louis university,saint louis,mo 63103, United States, university of kansas,lawrence,lawrence,ks, United States
 
     
   
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