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Memory for intergroup apologies and its relationship with forgiveness

✍ Scribed by Catherine R. Philpot; Matthew J. Hornsey


Book ID
102178958
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
138 KB
Volume
41
Category
Article
ISSN
0046-2772

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This paper examines memory for collective apologies. Our interest was in determining whether people are aware of intergroup apologies and whether this contributes to forgiveness for offending groups. Surveys conducted in three nations affected by Japanese World War II aggression found that participants were more likely to believe (incorrectly) that Japan had not apologized for WWII than to believe (correctly) that they had (Study 1). In contrast, participants were eight times more likely to believe that a corporation had apologized for misconduct than to (correctly) recall that they had not (Study 1). Forgiveness levels were higher among those who believed the group had apologized than among apology deniers, although the effect was weak and inconsistent. However, in a follow-up study that measured identification with the victim group it was found that high identifiers were significantly less likely to ''remember'' an apology (Study 2). Results suggest that memories for collective apologies are fluid and may not be causally related to intergroup forgiveness.


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