Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/37262
Author(s): Meuer, F.
Guerra, R.
Madeira, F.
Valentim, J. P.
Date: 2026
Title: From Portuguese colonial representations to racist endorsement: Investigating correlational and causal paths
Journal title: International Review of Social Psychology / Revue Internationale de Psychology Sociale
Volume: 39
Number: 1
Reference: Meuer, F., Guerra, R., Madeira, F., & Valentim, J. P. (2026). From Portuguese colonial representations to racist endorsement: Investigating correlational and causal paths. International Review of Social Psychology / Revue Internationale de Psychology Sociale, 39(1), Article 8. https://doi.org/10.5334/irsp.1110
ISSN: 2119-4130
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.5334/irsp.1110
Keywords: Social representations of history
Luso-tropicalism
Intergroup relations
Biological racism
Cultural racism
Abstract: Dominant social representations of history play a central role in shaping how societies interpret the past and regulate intergroup relations in the present. Yet empirical evidence on how historical narratives causally influence racist beliefs remains limited. Drawing on the Social Representations of History framework, the present research examines how dominant and counter-representations of colonial history relate to the endorsement of biological and cultural racism. Focusing on the Portuguese context, where colonial history is often narrated through a positive and benevolent lens grounded in the ideology of Luso-tropicalism—the belief that Portuguese colonialism was uniquely tolerant and benign—we investigate both correlational and causal pathways linking these representations to racist attitudes. In Study 1 (N = 216), using data from CRONOS-2, part of the European Social Survey Round 10, we show that endorsement of Luso-tropicalist beliefs predicts higher levels of both biological and cultural racism, above and beyond age and education. In Study 2 (N = 220), we experimentally manipulated representations of colonial history using three conditions: a positive representation derived from a textbook, a negative representation, and a neutral control. Results indicate that biological racism was significantly lower when colonial history was presented in a negative frame compared to a combined positive and neutral representation, while no significant differences emerged for cultural racism. Together, findings from Study 1 and Study 2 provide novel evidence that counter, negative representations of colonial history can attenuate racist beliefs. By integrating correlational and experimental evidence, this research contributes to broader debates on social representations of history as political projects with enduring consequences for contemporary intergroup relations.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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