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Journal ArticleDOI

A sense of self-perceived collective victimhood in intractable conflicts

TLDR
A sense of self-perceived collective victimhood emerges as a major theme in the ethos of conflict of societies involved in intractable conflict and is a fundamental part of the collective memory of the conflict as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
A sense of self-perceived collective victimhood emerges as a major theme in the ethos of conflict of societies involved in intractable conflict and is a fundamental part of the collective memory of the conflict. This sense is defined as a mindset shared by group members that results from a perceived intentional harm with severe consequences, inflicted on the collective by another group. This harm is viewed as undeserved, unjust and immoral, and one that the group could not prevent. The article analyses the nature of the self-perceived collective sense of victimhood in the conflict, its antecedents, the functions that it fulfils for the society and the consequences that result from this view.

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Dead aid: why aid is not working and how there is another way for Africa

L.E. Wa-ku-Mikishi
- 01 Jan 2010 - 
TL;DR: The 36th Annual AIS Conference, INTERDISCIPLINARY PUBLIC PROBLEMS, THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY AND DIVERSITY as discussed by the authors, was held at MSU and the Social Science, RCAH, Lyman Briggs and James Madison Colleges.
Journal ArticleDOI

When Suffering Begets Suffering: The Psychology of Competitive Victimhood Between Adversarial Groups in Violent Conflicts

TL;DR: Drawing on the Needs-Based Model, the authors suggest that CV may reflect groups’ motivations to restore power or moral acceptance, and contend that such competition serves various functions that contribute to the maintenance of conflicts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Socio-psychological barriers to peace making: An empirical examination within the Israeli Jewish Society

TL;DR: In this paper, an empirical study was conducted among a nationwide representative sample of Jews in Israel, within the context of the Middle Eastern conflict, and the results showed a path leading from general worldviews (e.g. General values, Right Wing Authoritarianism, Implicit theories about groups) to openness to new information and readiness to compromise through the me...
Journal ArticleDOI

Collective Trauma and the Social Construction of Meaning.

TL;DR: The current paper systematically delineates the process that begins with a collective trauma, transforms into a collective memory, and culminates in a system of meaning that allows groups to redefine who they are and where they are going.
References
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Book

Unraveling the mystery of health: how people manage stress and stay well

TL;DR: A clutter tracking and cancelling system, for use in a MTI radar system, comprising an auxiliary channel consisting primarily of a phase detector and a canceller.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moral Disengagement in the Perpetration of Inhumanities

TL;DR: Given the many mechanisms for disengaging moral control, civilized life requires, in addition to humane personal standards, safeguards built into social systems that uphold compassionate behavior and renounce cruelty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retaliation in the workplace: the roles of distributive, procedural, and interactional justice

TL;DR: This article investigated the relationship between organizational justice and organizational retaliation behavior and found a relation between distributive justice and retaliation only when there was low interactional and procedural justice, and the 2-way interaction of distributive and interactional justice was observed only at a low level of procedural justice.
Journal ArticleDOI

When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda

TL;DR: This paper defined the crisis of postcolonial Citizenship: Settler and Native as Political Identities 19 2. The origins of Hutu and Tutsi 41 3. The Racialization of the Hutu/Tutsi Difference under Colonialism 76 4. The ''Social Revolution\" of 1959 103 5. The Second Republic: Redefining Tutsis from Race to Ethnicity 132 6. The Politics of Indigeneity in Uganda: Background to the RPF Invasion 159 7. The Civil War and the Genocide 185 8. Conclusion: Political Reform after Genocide 264 Notes 283
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