Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Reconciliation versus justice? It depends on the context: the role of symmetric and asymmetric violence in predicting postconflict attitudes

Published inSocial psychological & personality science, vol. 12, no. 2, p. 202-212
Publication date2020-04-07
First online date2020-04-07
Abstract

Whether attitudes toward postconflict justice and reconciliation are complementary or contradictory has been long debated. We posit that the answer to this question is context-dependent. Multilevel analyses of two large-scale surveys among war-affected communities in the former Yugoslavia (total N = 11,843), combined with geo-coded data on conflict events, demonstrate that a crucial contextual determinant is the prevalence of asymmetric violence in communities: The more a community was exposed to events of asymmetric violence, which disproportionately affect one group, the more the support for justice was linked to rejecting reconciliation. These findings were conceptually replicated with two different data sets and different operationalizations of justice and reconciliation attitudes. Conversely, in one study, the more a community was exposed to symmetric violence, which affects members of all adversary groups, the more the justice and reconciliation were perceived as compatible. This study shows the importance of a contextualized approach to understanding intergroup attitudes in postconflict settings.

Research groups
Citation (ISO format)
PENIC, Sandra, VOLLHARDT, Johanna Ray, REICHER, Stephen. Reconciliation versus justice? It depends on the context: the role of symmetric and asymmetric violence in predicting postconflict attitudes. In: Social psychological & personality science, 2020, vol. 12, n° 2, p. 202–212. doi: 10.1177/1948550620915064
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelPublic
Identifiers
Journal ISSN1948-5506
194views
451downloads

Technical informations

Creation16/12/2021 08:47:00
First validation16/12/2021 08:47:00
Update time17/01/2025 15:59:08
Status update17/01/2025 15:59:08
Last indexation17/01/2025 16:05:04
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack