“…One such motive may relate to a feature common to many conflicts—the existence of a clear social hierarchy in which one group, typically the perpetrator, is high status and the other, typically the victim, is low status (Fiske & Berdahl, 2007; Magee & Galinsky, 2008; Pratto, Sidanius, Stallworth, & Malle, 1994). Although most intergroup apology research has explored contexts meeting this description (e.g., Barlow et al, 2015; Rotella, Richeson, & McAdams, 2015; Wohl, Matheson, Branscombe, & Anisman, 2013; Zaiser & Giner-Sorolla, 2013), the implications of this underlying hierarchical relationship between groups have been largely ignored (cf. Halabi, Dovidio, & Nadler, 2018; Shnabel, Halabi, & SimanTov-Nachlieli, 2015).…”