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The shadow of war: Parental competitive victimhood and children's contact intentions in two post-accord societies
Date Issued
2024-08
Date Available
2025-09-12T11:25:18Z
Abstract
The effects of political violence are felt across generations; for example, extent of parental competitive victimhood (feeling that one's ingroup was relatively more victimised during the conflict) predicts adolescent's intergroup discrimination. We extend that research to children, born a generation after the height of violence. Participants were 223 family dyads with children aged 7–11 (M = 9.05, SD = 1.30; 52.4% female): Croatia (n = 82) and Republic of North Macedonia (RNM: n = 141), equally split by group status (i.e., Croatia: Croats/Serbs; RNM: Macedonian/Albanian). Parents reported on competitive victimhood while children reported on intergroup contact intentions (e.g., shared education initiatives). Moderation analysis across sites found a significant status by competitive victimhood interaction; increased parental competitive victimhood was associated with decreased contact intentions among minority, but not majority, children. We review site-specific findings in relation to their historical context, concluding with the implications for shared education, reconciliation and peacebuilding.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
European Journal of Social Psychology
Volume
54
Issue
5
Start Page
1022
End Page
1036
Copyright (Published Version)
2024 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0046-2772
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Counihan et al 2024 - The shadow of war.pdf
Size
902.12 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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