White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
about
Moral outrage mediates the dampening effect of system justification on support for redistributive social policiesThe Role of Perceived In-group Moral Superiority in Reparative Intentions and Approach MotivationInequality as ingroup privilege or outgroup disadvantage: the impact of group focus on collective guilt and interracial attitudes.Moral emotions and moral behavior.Vicarious retribution: the role of collective blame in intergroup aggression.'This will bring shame on our nation': The role of anticipated group-based emotions on collective action.The political solidarity model of social change: dynamics of self-categorization in intergroup power relations.Commonality and the complexity of "we": social attitudes and social change.When suffering begets suffering: the psychology of competitive victimhood between adversarial groups in violent conflicts.Intrapsychic and interpersonal guilt: a critical review of the recent literature.Alternatives to the fixed-set model: A review of appraisal models of emotion.Emotional collectives: How groups shape emotions and emotions shape groups."It was only harmless banter!" The development and preliminary validation of the moral disengagement in sexual harassment scale.The Process Model of Group-Based Emotion: Integrating Intergroup Emotion and Emotion Regulation Perspectives.A system justification view of sexual violence: legitimizing gender inequality and reduced moral outrage are connected to greater rape myth acceptance.Jewish Israeli social workers' responses to ethnic health inequality.Angry opposition to government redress: when the structurally advantaged perceive themselves as relatively deprived.Anger and guilt about ingroup advantage explain the willingness for political action.Framing inequity safely: Whites' motivated perceptions of racial privilege.Why are attributions to discrimination interpersonally costly? A test of system- and group-justifying motivations.Comparisons and perceived deprivation in ethnic minority settings.Crimes of the past: defensive temporal distancing in the face of past in-group wrongdoing.Acting in solidarity: Testing an extended dual pathway model of collective action by bystander group members.Giving versus acting: Using latent profile analysis to distinguish between benevolent and activist support for global poverty reduction.The role of efficacy and moral outrage norms in creating the potential for international development activism through group-based interaction.Can emotions influence level-1 visual perspective taking?Two faces of group-based shame: moral shame and image shame differentially predict positive and negative orientations to ingroup wrongdoing.Shame and guilt--do they really differ in their focus of evaluation? Wanting to change the self and behavior in response to ingroup immorality.`Where the rubber hits the road' en route to inter-group harmony: examining contact intentions and contact behaviour under meta-stereotype threat.The exemplary social emotion guilt: not so relationship-oriented when another person repairs for you.Why individuals protest the perceived transgressions of their country: the role of anger, shame, and guilt.When East meets West: a longitudinal examination of the relationship between group relative deprivation and intergroup contact in reunified Germany.More than a lack of control: external explanations can evoke compassion for outgroups by increasing perceptions of suffering (independent of perceived control).Acknowledging the skeletons in our closet: the effect of group affirmation on collective guilt, collective shame, and reparatory attitudes.Perceiving social inequity: when subordinate-group positioning on one dimension of social hierarchy enhances privilege recognition on another.Arousal, processing, and risk taking: consequences of intergroup anger.Advantaged group's emotional reactions to intergroup inequality: the dynamics of pride, guilt, and sympathy.Consequences of learning about historical racism among European American and African American children.National Identification and Collective Emotions as Predictors of Pro-Social Attitudes Toward Islamic Minority Groups in IndonesiaWhites for racial justice: How contact with Black Americans predicts support for collective action among White Americans
P2860
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P2860
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
description
2003 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2003年の論文
@ja
2003年学术文章
@wuu
2003年学术文章
@zh
2003年学术文章
@zh-cn
2003年学术文章
@zh-hans
2003年学术文章
@zh-my
2003年学术文章
@zh-sg
2003年學術文章
@yue
2003年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@en
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@nl
type
label
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@en
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@nl
prefLabel
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@en
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
White guilt and racial compensation: the benefits and limits of self-focus.
@en
P2093
Aarti Iyer
Colin Wayne Leach
Faye J Crosby
P2860
P304
P356
10.1177/0146167202238377
P577
2003-01-01T00:00:00Z