- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Contributors
- INTRODUCTION
- Chapter 1 Reconciliation From a Social-Psychological Perspective
- Chapter 2 Instrumental and Socioemotional Paths to Intergroup Reconciliation and the Needs-Based Model of Socioemotional Reconciliation
- Chapter 3 Transforming Trauma in the Aftermath of Gross Human Rights Abuses: Making Public Spaces Intimate Through the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission
- Chapter 4 Social Categorization, Standards of Justice, and Collective Guilt
- Chapter 5 Prospects for Intergroup Reconciliation: Social-Psychological Predictors of Intergroup Forgiveness and Reparation in Northern Ireland and Chile
- Chapter 6 How Needs Can Motivate Intergroup Reconciliation in the Face of Intergroup Conflict
- Chapter 7 The Social Psychology of Respect: Implications for Delegitimization and Reconciliation
- Chapter 8 From Egosystem to Ecosystem in Intergroup Interactions: Implications for Intergroup Reconciliation
- Chapter 9 Stepping Stones to Reconciliation in Northern Ireland: Intergroup Contact, Forgiveness, and Trust
- Chapter 10 Majority and Minority Perspectives in Intergroup Relations: The Role of Contact, Group Representations, Threat, and Trust in Intergroup Conflict and Reconciliation
- Chapter 11 A Social-Psychological Approach to Postconflict Reconciliation
- Chapter 12 Reconciliation, Trust, and Cooperation: Using Bottom-Up and Top-Down Strategies to Achieve Peace in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
- Chapter 13 Diminishing Vertical Distance: Power and Social Status as Barriers to Intergroup Reconciliation
- Chapter 14 Social Identity, Legitimacy, and Intergroup Conflict: The Rocky Road to Reconciliation
- Chapter 15 Intergroup Relations and Reconciliation: Theoretical Analysis and Methodological Implications
- Chapter 16 The Road to Reconciliation
- Chapter 17 Promoting Reconciliation After Genocide and Mass Killing in Rwanda—And Other Postconflict Settings: Understanding the Roots of Violence, Healing, Shared History, and General Principles
- Chapter 18 Between Conflict and Reconciliation: Toward a Theory of Peaceful Coexistence
- Chapter 19 Help as a Vehicle to Reconciliation, With Particular Reference to Help for Extreme Health Needs
- Chapter 20 Reconciliation After Destructive Intergroup Conflict
- Index
The Social Psychology of Respect: Implications for Delegitimization and Reconciliation
The Social Psychology of Respect: Implications for Delegitimization and Reconciliation
- Chapter:
- (p.145) Chapter 7 The Social Psychology of Respect: Implications for Delegitimization and Reconciliation
- Source:
- The Social Psychology of Intergroup Reconciliation
- Author(s):
Ronnie Janoff-Bulman
Amelie Werther
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This chapter focuses on the role of respect in intergroup reconciliation. It first distinguishes between two types of respect — one largely intergroup and the other primarily intragroup in nature — and discusses the attributional components of these appraisals. It then moves to a discussion of disrespect and its implications for delegitimization, from invisibility to dehumanization, which is of paramount importance in the course and escalation of social conflict; the attributional elements of respect provide an important window for viewing these degrading processes. The chapter concludes with some implications of the analysis for reconciliation, focusing particularly on respect-enhancing strategies in intense social conflicts.
Keywords: categorical respect, contingent respect, disrespect, delegitimization, intergroup reconciliation
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Contributors
- INTRODUCTION
- Chapter 1 Reconciliation From a Social-Psychological Perspective
- Chapter 2 Instrumental and Socioemotional Paths to Intergroup Reconciliation and the Needs-Based Model of Socioemotional Reconciliation
- Chapter 3 Transforming Trauma in the Aftermath of Gross Human Rights Abuses: Making Public Spaces Intimate Through the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission
- Chapter 4 Social Categorization, Standards of Justice, and Collective Guilt
- Chapter 5 Prospects for Intergroup Reconciliation: Social-Psychological Predictors of Intergroup Forgiveness and Reparation in Northern Ireland and Chile
- Chapter 6 How Needs Can Motivate Intergroup Reconciliation in the Face of Intergroup Conflict
- Chapter 7 The Social Psychology of Respect: Implications for Delegitimization and Reconciliation
- Chapter 8 From Egosystem to Ecosystem in Intergroup Interactions: Implications for Intergroup Reconciliation
- Chapter 9 Stepping Stones to Reconciliation in Northern Ireland: Intergroup Contact, Forgiveness, and Trust
- Chapter 10 Majority and Minority Perspectives in Intergroup Relations: The Role of Contact, Group Representations, Threat, and Trust in Intergroup Conflict and Reconciliation
- Chapter 11 A Social-Psychological Approach to Postconflict Reconciliation
- Chapter 12 Reconciliation, Trust, and Cooperation: Using Bottom-Up and Top-Down Strategies to Achieve Peace in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
- Chapter 13 Diminishing Vertical Distance: Power and Social Status as Barriers to Intergroup Reconciliation
- Chapter 14 Social Identity, Legitimacy, and Intergroup Conflict: The Rocky Road to Reconciliation
- Chapter 15 Intergroup Relations and Reconciliation: Theoretical Analysis and Methodological Implications
- Chapter 16 The Road to Reconciliation
- Chapter 17 Promoting Reconciliation After Genocide and Mass Killing in Rwanda—And Other Postconflict Settings: Understanding the Roots of Violence, Healing, Shared History, and General Principles
- Chapter 18 Between Conflict and Reconciliation: Toward a Theory of Peaceful Coexistence
- Chapter 19 Help as a Vehicle to Reconciliation, With Particular Reference to Help for Extreme Health Needs
- Chapter 20 Reconciliation After Destructive Intergroup Conflict
- Index