Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration

After intergroup injustices, perpetrator groups may seek to restore intergroup relations by offering an apology. Through quantitative empirical tests some scholars have examined whether these apologies promote forgiveness and reconciliation. This work has found inconsistent relations between apology...

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Main Authors: Rachel R. Steele, Craig W. Blatz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2014-11-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/404
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spelling doaj-87c2193df7094bed9933cf3c5947a3872020-11-25T02:52:30ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252014-11-012126828810.5964/jspp.v2i1.404jspp.v2i1.404Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology ElaborationRachel R. Steele0Craig W. Blatz1Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA, USADepartment of Psychology, MacEwan University, Edmonton, CanadaAfter intergroup injustices, perpetrator groups may seek to restore intergroup relations by offering an apology. Through quantitative empirical tests some scholars have examined whether these apologies promote forgiveness and reconciliation. This work has found inconsistent relations between apology and forgiveness. We proposed and tested other variables as relevant outcomes of intergroup apology as well, namely perceived remorsefulness, faith in societal norms of justice, and trust. We also tested how the elaborateness of an apology changed its effectiveness. The study (N = 145) presented excerpts of President Clinton’s apology for the Tuskegee Syphilis Study to African-Americans, varying the apology elaborateness. We examined whether apologies of varying elaborateness affect forgiveness (to be consistent with past research), perceptions that the response was remorseful, beliefs that norms of just behavior would be upheld, and trust in the perpetrator group. All apologies, but particularly more elaborate apologies, resulted in higher perceptions of remorsefulness and justice norms, but not trust or forgiveness. The results imply that apologies may have many benefits with perceptions of remorsefulness and justice norms being amongst them.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/404apology elaborationintergroup apologyintergroup relationsjustice normsperceived remorsefulnessrestorative justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel R. Steele
Craig W. Blatz
spellingShingle Rachel R. Steele
Craig W. Blatz
Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
apology elaboration
intergroup apology
intergroup relations
justice norms
perceived remorsefulness
restorative justice
author_facet Rachel R. Steele
Craig W. Blatz
author_sort Rachel R. Steele
title Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
title_short Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
title_full Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
title_fullStr Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
title_full_unstemmed Faith in the Just Behavior of the Government: Intergroup Apologies and Apology Elaboration
title_sort faith in the just behavior of the government: intergroup apologies and apology elaboration
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2014-11-01
description After intergroup injustices, perpetrator groups may seek to restore intergroup relations by offering an apology. Through quantitative empirical tests some scholars have examined whether these apologies promote forgiveness and reconciliation. This work has found inconsistent relations between apology and forgiveness. We proposed and tested other variables as relevant outcomes of intergroup apology as well, namely perceived remorsefulness, faith in societal norms of justice, and trust. We also tested how the elaborateness of an apology changed its effectiveness. The study (N = 145) presented excerpts of President Clinton’s apology for the Tuskegee Syphilis Study to African-Americans, varying the apology elaborateness. We examined whether apologies of varying elaborateness affect forgiveness (to be consistent with past research), perceptions that the response was remorseful, beliefs that norms of just behavior would be upheld, and trust in the perpetrator group. All apologies, but particularly more elaborate apologies, resulted in higher perceptions of remorsefulness and justice norms, but not trust or forgiveness. The results imply that apologies may have many benefits with perceptions of remorsefulness and justice norms being amongst them.
topic apology elaboration
intergroup apology
intergroup relations
justice norms
perceived remorsefulness
restorative justice
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/404
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