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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Making sense of the past to understand the present: Attributions for historical trauma predict contemporary social and political attitudes
Roland ImhoffDennis T. KahnGilad HirschbergerKatja Hankesubject
Cultural StudiesSociology and Political ScienceSocial PsychologyHistorical traumaCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationGroup conflictCollective responsibilityPoliticsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Collective traumaPsychologyAttributionSocial psychologymedia_commondescription
Research indicates that the memory of collective trauma influences attitudes towards contemporary social and political issues. We suggest that the specific attributions for trauma that members of victim and perpetrator groups make provide a more nuanced understanding of this relationship. Thus, we constructed and validated a measure of attributions for the Holocaust. Then, we ran a preregistered study on representative samples in Germany ( N = 504) and Israel ( N = 469) to examine whether attributing the Holocaust to essentialist or contextual causes influences attitudes towards the immigration crisis and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Results indicated that, among Germans, attributing the Holocaust to German character was associated with positive attitudes to immigration via collective guilt. Among Israelis, attributions to German character were associated with negative attitudes to non-Jewish immigration, a hawkish stance in the Palestinian–Israeli conflict, and pro-Israel attitudes via a sense of perpetual victimization. Results reveal how attributions about past trauma affect contemporary social and political attitudes among victims and perpetrators.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021-11-22 | Group Processes & Intergroup Relations |