TY - JOUR
T1 - Where the Blame Lies
T2 - Unpacking Groups Into Their Constituent Subgroups Shifts Judgments of Blame in Intergroup Conflict
AU - Halevy, Nir
AU - Maoz, Ifat
AU - Vani, Preeti
AU - Reit, Emily S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - Whom do individuals blame for intergroup conflict? Do people attribute responsibility for intergroup conflict to the in-group or the out-group? Theoretically integrating the literatures on intergroup relations, moral psychology, and judgment and decision-making, we propose that unpacking a group by explicitly describing it in terms of its constituent subgroups increases perceived support for the view that the unpacked group shoulders more of the blame for intergroup conflict. Five preregistered experiments (N = 3,335 adults) found support for this novel hypothesis across three distinct intergroup conflicts: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, current racial tensions between White people and Black people in the United States, and the gender gap in wages in the United States. Our findings (a) highlight the independent roles that entrenched social identities and cognitive, presentation-based processes play in shaping blame judgments, (b) demonstrate that the effect of unpacking groups generalizes across partisans and nonpartisans, and (c) illustrate how constructing packed versus unpacked sets of potential perpetrators can critically shape where the blame lies.
AB - Whom do individuals blame for intergroup conflict? Do people attribute responsibility for intergroup conflict to the in-group or the out-group? Theoretically integrating the literatures on intergroup relations, moral psychology, and judgment and decision-making, we propose that unpacking a group by explicitly describing it in terms of its constituent subgroups increases perceived support for the view that the unpacked group shoulders more of the blame for intergroup conflict. Five preregistered experiments (N = 3,335 adults) found support for this novel hypothesis across three distinct intergroup conflicts: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, current racial tensions between White people and Black people in the United States, and the gender gap in wages in the United States. Our findings (a) highlight the independent roles that entrenched social identities and cognitive, presentation-based processes play in shaping blame judgments, (b) demonstrate that the effect of unpacking groups generalizes across partisans and nonpartisans, and (c) illustrate how constructing packed versus unpacked sets of potential perpetrators can critically shape where the blame lies.
KW - intergroup relations
KW - judgment and decision-making
KW - moral judgment
KW - open data
KW - open materials
KW - partition dependence
KW - preregistered
KW - support theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85120454234&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/09567976211026982
DO - 10.1177/09567976211026982
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C2 - 34846949
AN - SCOPUS:85120454234
SN - 0956-7976
VL - 33
SP - 76
EP - 89
JO - Psychological Science
JF - Psychological Science
IS - 1
ER -