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  1. Pengakuan Bahwa Aksi Kelompok-Sendiri Bisa Mengancam Kelompok-Lain (Acknowledgements of Threatening Ingroup Actions) dan Perannya dalam Meredam Ekstremisme (Extremism) dan Radikalisme Kekerasan (Violent Radicalism)
  2. The psychological antecedents of resistance to humanitarian aid
  3. Promoting reconciliation in separatist conflict: The effect of morality framing
  4. On being moderate and peaceful: Why Islamic political moderateness promotes outgroup tolerance and reconciliation
  5. Explaining Muslims’ Aggressive Tendencies Towards the West: The Role of Negative Stereotypes, Anger, Perceived Conflict and Islamic Fundamentalism
  6. Remember your crimes: How an appeal to ingroup wrongdoings fosters reconciliation in separatist conflict
  7. Predicting Support for Reconciliation in Separatist Conflict
  8. A Majority Group’s Perspective-taking Towards a Minority Group
  9. The Effect of a Majority Group’s Perspective-Taking on Minority Helping
  10. Corrigendum
  11. The role of dual categorization and relative ingroup prototypicality in reparations to a minority group: An examination of empathy and collective guilt as mediators
  12. How morality threat promotes reconciliation in separatist conflict: A majority group perspective
  13. Corrigendum
  14. You are the real terrorist and we are just your puppet: Using individual and group factors to explain Indonesian muslims’ attributions of causes of terrorism
  15. The Role of Identity Subversion in Structuring the Effects of Intergroup Threats and Negative Emotions on Belief in Anti-West Conspiracy Theories in Indonesia
  16. When Agony Begets Zealotry
  17. Demonising the Victim
  18. The effect of intergroup threat and social identity salience on the belief in conspiracy theories over terrorism in indonesia: collective angst as a mediator
  19. National Identification and Collective Emotions as Predictors of Pro-Social Attitudes Toward Islamic Minority Groups in Indonesia
  20. We believe in your conspiracy if we distrust you: the role of intergroup distrust in structuring the effect of Islamic identification, competitive victimhood, and group incompatibility on belief in a conspiracy theory
  21. The role of social identification, intergroup threat, and out-group derogation in explaining belief in conspiracy theory about terrorism in Indonesia
  22. Examining predictors of tolerance and helping for Islamic religious minorities in Indonesia
  23. Intergroup Helping in Response to Separatism
  24. The effect of outgroup status and perspective-taking on empathy and outgroup helping
  25. Perspective-taking and outgroup helping: The moderating role of warmth impression and outgroup status
  26. The impact of multiculturalism on immigrant helping
  27. When Common Identities Reduce Between-Group Helping