There has been a growing interest in the study on collective victimhood and this research has increased our knowledge on how victim groups construe their victimization relative to other groups. However, most of this research has assumed that the groups involved in these construals were pre-existing prior to the conflict and remained fixed during and after the conflict. This study aimed to examine how conflict facilitates the transformation of social identities (i.e., how ingroups and outgroups are construed) and how these transformed social identities are used by group members in their construals of comparative victim beliefs. Eighteen South Sudanese immigrants were interviewed about their experiences during the Sudan civil wars. Thematic a...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
This paper examines how temporally differentiated representations of ingroup victimhood and acknowle...
This article explores the complexity of the spatial construction of ethnicity, identity, and sociopo...
Most social psychological research on collective victimhood has examined its consequences for interg...
The present research examined how group members construe events of conflict and violence in which th...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has often focused on comparisons between the ...
Previous research on dehumanization has been conducted primarily in Western contexts, and outside of...
Many groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
Groups in conflict develop strikingly different construals of the same violent events. These clashin...
Although our experiences are shaped by multiple social identities such as race, class, and gender, m...
Groups that perceive themselves as victims can engage in “competitive victimhood”. We propose that, ...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
While collective identifications of diasporic Kurds have attracted considerable scholarly interest, ...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has focused on just a few ways in which peopl...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
This paper examines how temporally differentiated representations of ingroup victimhood and acknowle...
This article explores the complexity of the spatial construction of ethnicity, identity, and sociopo...
Most social psychological research on collective victimhood has examined its consequences for interg...
The present research examined how group members construe events of conflict and violence in which th...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has often focused on comparisons between the ...
Previous research on dehumanization has been conducted primarily in Western contexts, and outside of...
Many groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
Groups in conflict develop strikingly different construals of the same violent events. These clashin...
Although our experiences are shaped by multiple social identities such as race, class, and gender, m...
Groups that perceive themselves as victims can engage in “competitive victimhood”. We propose that, ...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
While collective identifications of diasporic Kurds have attracted considerable scholarly interest, ...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has focused on just a few ways in which peopl...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
This paper examines how temporally differentiated representations of ingroup victimhood and acknowle...
This article explores the complexity of the spatial construction of ethnicity, identity, and sociopo...