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Social Psychology David Myers 10e Copyright 2010 McGraw-Hill Companies 1 Chapter Thirteen • Conflict and Peacemaking 2 What Creates Conflict? • Social Dilemmas – Social trap • Situation in which the conflicting parties, by each rationally pursuing its self-interest, become caught in mutually destructive behavior 3 What Creates Conflict? • Social Dilemmas – The “Prisoners Dilemma” – “Tragedy of the Commons” • Non-zero-sum games Figure 13.1 4 What Creates Conflict? • Social Dilemmas – Resolving social dilemmas • Regulation – Safeguard the common good • • • • Make the group small Communication Change the payoffs Appeal to altruistic norms 5 What Creates Conflict? • Competition – Realistic group conflict • • • • Win-lose competition Negative images of the other groups Strong ingroup cohesiveness Pride 6 What Creates Conflict? • Perceived Injustice – People perceive justice as equity • Distribution of rewards in proportion to individuals’ contributions – If one contributes more and benefits less, he will feel exploited 7 What Creates Conflict? • Misperception – Of other’s motives and goals – Seeds of misperception • Self-serving bias • Tendency to self-justify • Fundamental attribution error 8 What Creates Conflict? • Mirror-Image Perceptions – Reciprocal views of each other often held by parties in conflict • Example – Each may view itself as moral and peace-loving and the other as evil and aggressive – Evil leader–good people perception 9 What Creates Conflict? • Simplistic Thinking – When tension rises rational thinking becomes more difficult • Views of the enemy become more simplistic and stereotyped • Shifting Perceptions – The same processes that create the enemy’s image can reverse it when the enemy becomes an ally 10 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Contact – Predicts decreased prejudice • Friendship – Those who form friendships with outgroup members develop more positive attitudes toward the outgroup • Equal-status contact – Contact on an equal basis » To reduce prejudice, interracial contact should be between persons equal in status 11 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Cooperation – Common external threats build cohesiveness – Superordinate goals foster cooperation • Shared goal that necessitates cooperative effort – Cooperative learning improves racial attitudes – Group and superordinate identities 12 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Communication – Bargaining • Seeking an agreement to a conflict through direct negotiation between parties – Tough bargaining may lower the other party’s expectations, but can sometimes backfire 13 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Communication – Mediation • Attempt by a neutral third party to resolve a conflict by facilitating communication and offering suggestions – Integrative agreements » Win-win agreements that reconcile both parties’ interests to their mutual benefit – Unravel misperceptions with controlled communications 14 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Communication – Arbitration • Resolution of a conflict by a neutral third party who studies both sides and imposes a settlement – Final-offer arbitration » Motivates each party to make a reasonable proposal 15 How Can Peace Be Achieved? • Conciliation – GRIT • Acronym for “graduated and reciprocated initiatives in tension reduction”—a strategy designed to de-escalate international tensions 16