Personal emotions, emotional climate, social sharing, beliefs, and values among people affected and unaffected by past political violence


Abstract:

Beliefs, emotions, and perception of socioemotional climate were analyzed in people affected and unaffected by past political violence in Chile (N = 1278). Compared with unaffected people, affected people reported a more positive attitude toward transitional justice procedure, were better informed, were more likely to reject an attitude of forgetting about the past, regarded institutional apologies as less sincere and effective, judged the current social climate as less positive, reported higher negative emotions related to the past, and showed less purpose in life. No differences were found for forgiveness or for outcomes of the transitional justice procedures or Truth Commissions, such as documentation of the truth or creation of an inclusive collective memory. Across groups, a negative view of forgiveness and a positive view of Truth Commissions dominated the picture. However, compared with nonvictims, victims also reported more pride and were more likely to endorse Universalist values, and this suggested that victims were subject, simultaneously, to a long-term negative impact of past events and a process of posttraumatic growth.

Año de publicación:

2014

Keywords:

  • Truth and reconciliation commission
  • posttraumatic growth
  • Emotional climate
  • Political violence
  • Attitude toward the past

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Psicología social
  • Sociología

Áreas temáticas:

  • Interacción social
  • Procesos sociales
  • Ciencias políticas (Política y gobierno)