Groups in conflict develop strikingly different construals of the same violent events. These clashing perceptions of past violence can have detrimental consequences for intergroup relations and might provoke new hostilities. In this article, we integrate and juxtapose what we know about construals of collective violence by delineating the different dimensions along which these construals differ between victim and perpetrator groups: regarding the question of who is the victim, who is responsible for the harm doing, what the perpetrator’s intent was, how severe the violence was, and when it took place. Then, we discuss the individual- and group-level factors (e.g., collective narratives, social identities) that shape these construals, as wel...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
Individuals can assume—and be assigned—multiple roles throughout a conflict: perpetrators can be vic...
The present research examined how group members construe events of conflict and violence in which th...
Many groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
This chapter discusses the role of collective victimization in inciting, sustaining, and preventing ...
Most groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Conflict theories usually focus on: the international system of anarchistic self-help, innate human ...
Literature on collective violence usually treats an act of aggression as a unidimensional phenomenon...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Collective victimhood is the belief that one’s own group has been intentionally and undeservingly ha...
Collective victimhood, which results from the experience of being targeted as members of a group, ha...
This chapter builds on the needs-based model of reconciliation, which posits victim groups’ primary ...
Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in viole...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has focused on just a few ways in which peopl...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
Individuals can assume—and be assigned—multiple roles throughout a conflict: perpetrators can be vic...
The present research examined how group members construe events of conflict and violence in which th...
Many groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
This chapter discusses the role of collective victimization in inciting, sustaining, and preventing ...
Most groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims o...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Conflict theories usually focus on: the international system of anarchistic self-help, innate human ...
Literature on collective violence usually treats an act of aggression as a unidimensional phenomenon...
The current research examines how members of groups that have been victimized by ethnopolitical viol...
Collective victimhood is the belief that one’s own group has been intentionally and undeservingly ha...
Collective victimhood, which results from the experience of being targeted as members of a group, ha...
This chapter builds on the needs-based model of reconciliation, which posits victim groups’ primary ...
Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in viole...
Social psychological research on collective victimhood has focused on just a few ways in which peopl...
Collective memories of historical ingroup victimization can be linked to prosocial or hostile interg...
Individuals can assume—and be assigned—multiple roles throughout a conflict: perpetrators can be vic...
The present research examined how group members construe events of conflict and violence in which th...