TY - JOUR
T1 - Understanding disagreement within the majority about action to atone for past wrongs
AU - Hartley, Lisa Kathryn
AU - McGarty, Craig
AU - Donaghue, Ngaire
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Policies atoning for past wrongs against minority groups are often contested within the majority. During the year after the apology to the Indigenous Australian Stolen Generations, predictors of non-Indigenous (majority) collective action intentions focusing on support or opposition to reform reconciliation policies (Study 1, N=206) and compensation to the Stolen Generations (Study 2, N=215; Study 3, N=298) were examined. Action was analyzed as a function of national identity, opinion-based group identity, group-based guilt, political orientation, and collective efficacy. Opinion-based group identification was an independent predictor of action for all groups except for anti-compensation, where efficacy strongly predicted action. Findings highlight opinion-based groups' role in capturing the fault lines of disagreement within majority groups.
AB - Policies atoning for past wrongs against minority groups are often contested within the majority. During the year after the apology to the Indigenous Australian Stolen Generations, predictors of non-Indigenous (majority) collective action intentions focusing on support or opposition to reform reconciliation policies (Study 1, N=206) and compensation to the Stolen Generations (Study 2, N=215; Study 3, N=298) were examined. Action was analyzed as a function of national identity, opinion-based group identity, group-based guilt, political orientation, and collective efficacy. Opinion-based group identification was an independent predictor of action for all groups except for anti-compensation, where efficacy strongly predicted action. Findings highlight opinion-based groups' role in capturing the fault lines of disagreement within majority groups.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/549063
U2 - 10.1111/jasp.12023
DO - 10.1111/jasp.12023
M3 - Article
SN - 0021-9029
VL - 43
SP - E246-E261
JO - Journal of Applied Social Psychology
JF - Journal of Applied Social Psychology
IS - Suppl. 2
ER -