非原住民加拿大人的后殖民意识形态、盟友关系和集体罪恶感预测对和解、集体行动和政治宽容的支持

IF 2.1 3区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology Pub Date : 2025-01-10 DOI:10.1002/casp.70043
Jaiden Herkimer, Becky Choma, Leen Nasser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自加拿大真相与和解委员会(2015)报告及其94项行动呼吁发布以来,一直在推动与加拿大土著人民的真相与和解。许多繁重的工作都是由土著人民完成的;但要全面纠正不公正,就需要非土著的支持。在两项针对非土著加拿大人的研究中(n = 355;n = 341),我们调查了后殖民意识形态(历史否定、象征性排斥)、盟友/支持者身份和集体内疚作为对和解和土著集体行动运动支持的预测因素,以及土著人民的政治宽容。与假设一致,较高的后殖民意识形态,较低的盟友/支持者认同和较低的集体内疚感与较少的支持和较少的政治宽容有关。集体内疚感成为和解支持和土著集体行动的中介(研究1中的象征性排斥除外);但它缓和了政治宽容的关系。在研究1中,集体内疚感也调节了象征性排斥与盟友/支持者认同之间的关系。讨论了促进对后殖民意识形态的理解的未来方向和旨在改善群体间关系的可能应用干预措施。
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Non-Indigenous Canadians' Post-Colonial Ideologies, Allyship and Collective Guilt Predict Support for Reconciliation, Collective Action and Political Tolerance

Since the release of the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission's (2015) report and their 94 Calls to Action, there has been a push to advance truth and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in Canada. Much of the heavy lifting has been done by Indigenous peoples; but to comprehensively redress injustices there is a need for non-Indigenous support. In two studies with non-Indigenous Canadians (n = 355; n = 341), we investigated post-colonial ideologies (historical negation, symbolic exclusion), ally/supporter identity and collective guilt as predictors of support for reconciliation and Indigenous collective action movements, and political tolerance of Indigenous peoples. Consistent with hypotheses, higher post-colonial ideologies, lower ally/supporter identification and lower collective guilt related to less support and less political tolerance. Collective guilt emerged as a mediator for support for reconciliation and Indigenous collective action (except for symbolic exclusion in Study 1); but it moderated the relations for political tolerance. Collective guilt also moderated relations between symbolic exclusion and ally/supporter identity with support for reconciliation in Study 1. Future directions for advancing understanding of post-colonial ideologies and possible applied interventions aimed at improving intergroup relations are discussed.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
7.40%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology publishes papers regarding social behaviour in relation to community problems and strengths. The journal is international in scope, reflecting the common concerns of scholars and community practitioners in Europe and worldwide.
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