Publication | Closed Access
Guilt and Shame Through Recipients’ Eyes
19
Citations
8
References
2010
Year
Systemic JusticeSocial PsychologyEmpathyDiscriminationOutgroup Take InsultLawRacial PrejudiceVictimisationPsychologySocial SciencesAfrican American StudiesRacismSocial IdentityManipulation (Psychology)Applied Social PsychologyMoral PsychologyAnti-racismSocial BiasProsocial BehaviorRepresentative Offers CompensationSociologyBlack Community MembersMicroaggressionInjustice
Previous research has found that people collectively wronged by an outgroup take insult when its representative offers compensation, and that an expression of shame but not guilt can lower such insult. This experiment showed a moderating factor: strength of outgroup blame. Black community members were participants, presented with an apology for discriminatory searches of Blacks by the police. The effects – that shame but not guilt reduces insult from compensation – were replicated only among those who strongly blamed outgroup entities. As before, these effects emerged only on insult rather than satisfaction measures, and only when compensation was offered. When blamed by the public, an official body should therefore consider how much its apology conveys shame rather than guilt.
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