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Why Individuals Protest the Perceived Transgressions of Their Country: The Role of Anger, Shame, and Guilt
Aarti Iyer1*,
Toni Schmader2,
Brian Lickel3
1 University of Exeter
2 University of Arizona
3 University of Southern California
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: a.iyer{at}exeter.ac.uk.
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Abstract |
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The present research examined emotions as predictors of opposition to policies and actions of one's country that are perceived to be illegitimate. Two studies investigated the political implications of American (Study 1) and British (Study 2) citizens' anger, guilt, and shame responses to perceived harm caused by their countries' occupation of Iraq. In both studies, a manipulation of pervasive threat to the country's image increased participants' shame but not guilt. The emotions predicted political action intentions to advocate distinct opposition strategies. Shame predicted action intentions to advocate withdrawal from Iraq. Anger predicted action intentions to advocate compensation to Iraq, confrontation of agents responsible, and withdrawal from Iraq. Anger directed at different targets (ingroup, ingroup representative, and outgroup representative) predicted action intentions to support distinct strategies (Study 2). Guilt did not independently predict any political action intentions. Implications for the study of political action and emotions in intergroup contexts are discussed.
First published on April 17, 2007, doi:10.1177/0146167206297402
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 2007;33:572.
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2007

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