par Zahreddine, Sarah ;Azzi, Assaad Elia
Référence Annual Meeting of the Belgian Association for Psychological Sciences (May 14th-15th, 2019: Liège)
Publication Non publié, 2019-05-14
Poster de conférence
Résumé : Lebanon experienced a civil war between 1975 and 1990, when the 18 Lebanese religious communities fought against each other. Intergroup attitudes today are still influenced by memories of the war and by perceptions of victimhood, even among young people who were born after the war. My research project aims to study the collective memory of the Lebanese civil war and its relation with the Lebanese social identity. Method: online questionnaire that evaluates war memory knowledge, source of information, level of identification (regional, national, religious, and political identity), attribution of responsibility and perceived victimhood, among 5 main religious communities (data are currently being collected: preliminary analyses are expected to be done before the BAPS meeting). Hypothesis: We suggest that the level identification will mediate the effect between the collective memory and the attribution of responsibility and Perceived victimhood.