Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture (67)
22.
De Guissmé, L., Lastrego, S., Melotte, P., & Licata, L. (2017). Attitudes Towards World War II Collaboration in Belgium: Effects on Political Positioning Towards the Amnesty Issue in the Two Main Linguistic Communities. Psychologica belgica, 57(3), http://doi.org/10.5334/pb.346, 32-51. doi:10.5334/pb.34625.
Bouchat, P., Licata, L., Rosoux, V., Allesch, C., Ammerer, H., Bovina, I., Bruckmüller, S., Cabecinhas, R., Chryssochoou, X., Cohrs, C., Cserto, I., Delouvee, S., Durante, F., Ernst-Vintila, A., Flassbeck, C., Hilton, D., Kesteloot, C., Kislioglu, R., Krenn, A., Macovei, I., Mari, S., Petrovic, N., Polya, T., Sa, A., Sakki, I., Turcajanin, V., Van Ypersele, L., Volpato, C., Bilewicz, M., & Klein, O. (2017). A Century of Victimhood : Antecedents and Current Impacts of Perceived Suffering in World War I Across Europe. European journal of social psychology, 14. doi:10.1002/ejsp.223226.
Stewart, A. L., Pratto, F., Zeineddine, F. B., Sweetman, J., Eicher, V., Licata, L., Morselli, D., Saab, R., Aiello, A., Chryssochoou, X., Cichocka, A., Cidam, A., Foels, R., Giguere, B., Liu, L., Prati, F., & Van Stekelenburgs, J. (2016). International Support for the Arab Uprisings: Understanding Sympathetic Collective Action Using Theories of Social Dominance and Social Identity. Group processes & intergroup relations, 19(1), 6-26. doi:10.1177/136843021455831031.
Hanke, K., Liu, J. H., Sibley, C. G., Paez, D., Gaines, S., Moloney, G., Leong, C.-H., Wagner, W., Licata, L., Klein, O., Garber, I., Böhm, G., Hilton, D., Valchev, V., Khan, S., & Cabecinhas, R. (2015). “Heroes” and “Villains” of World History across Cultures. PloS one. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.011564133.
Kanazayire, C., Licata, L., Melotte, P., Dusingizemungu, J. P., & Azzi, A. E. (2014). Does Identification With Rwanda Increase Reconciliation Sentiments Between Genocide Survivors and Non-Victims? The Mediating Roles of Perceived Intergroup Similarity and Self-Esteem During Commemorations. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 2(1), 489-504. doi:10.5964/jspp.v2i1.319