Intergroup apologies from both sides: Perceptions of goals and satisfaction in two European contexts.

We report two studies conducted contemporaneously with past apologies that focused on satisfaction and group-relevant outcomes of the apology. Study 1 surveyed English (apologizing group) and Irish nationalist (recipient group) respondents (N = 99) about the British apology in 2010 for the Bloody Sunday massacre. Study 2 surveyed Bosniaks (recipient group), Serbians in Belgrade, and Bosnian Serbs (apologizing groups; total N = 184) about a Serbian apology in 2013 for the Srebrenica massacre. In Study 1, apologizers showed greater satisfaction than recipients, in line with their higher evaluations of the apology’s goal fulfillment. But in Study 2, apologizers were less satisfied than recipients, even as they perceived higher empowerment of recipients and more shifting of obligation to them. In both settings, satisfaction was predicted across samples by perceptions of how well the apology met image improvement, obligation shifting, and recipient empowerment goals, with no significant moderation by group. These findings, as with other recent research, challenge the group differences implicit in the needs-based model and suggest that the bases for satisfaction with conciliatory acts may not be as different as assumed between sides of a recent conflict. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
Source: Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research