Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?

The concept of representational contamination is introduced to account for psychological changes in the public sphere after a local armed clash deflects a national peace process. Although representational contamination is fundamentally psychological, our conceptualization of this phenomenon merges i...

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Main Authors: Montiel, Cristina J, Dela Paz, Erwine, Custodio, Lissa
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2017
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/6
https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2017-08954-001
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.psychology-faculty-pubs-10052020-02-10T05:06:24Z Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process? Montiel, Cristina J Dela Paz, Erwine Custodio, Lissa The concept of representational contamination is introduced to account for psychological changes in the public sphere after a local armed clash deflects a national peace process. Although representational contamination is fundamentally psychological, our conceptualization of this phenomenon merges ideas from other social science disciplines such as media communication, political derailment, and intergroup conflict. We push psychology to more macro layers of analyses, and increase its theoretical utility for social issues such as peace and conflict. As a case in point, we take the Muslim-Christian peace process in the Philippines, as positive representations of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) shift dramatically and negatively after an armed clash in the remote municipality of Mamasapano. Our research innovates a methodological mix of qualitative and quantitative strategies to access natural data in the real world, obtain mathematical accuracy, and add discursive depth. We employ a sequential mixed methods strategy on a data corpus of 178 news reports about the BBL, 5 weeks before and 5 weeks after the Mamasapano clash. Text-mining calculations yield word association scores of support (range 57%–89%) and confidence (consistently 100%), indicating a high discursive overlap between BBL and Mamasapano. Computed word association maps also show how BBL is associated with positive words before Mamasapano and negative words after the military encounter. We end by raising practical questions on how to deal with representational contamination, and discuss issues of psychological containment in the public sphere. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/6 https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2017-08954-001 Psychology Department Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Psychology
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
country Philippines
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Montiel, Cristina J
Dela Paz, Erwine
Custodio, Lissa
Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
description The concept of representational contamination is introduced to account for psychological changes in the public sphere after a local armed clash deflects a national peace process. Although representational contamination is fundamentally psychological, our conceptualization of this phenomenon merges ideas from other social science disciplines such as media communication, political derailment, and intergroup conflict. We push psychology to more macro layers of analyses, and increase its theoretical utility for social issues such as peace and conflict. As a case in point, we take the Muslim-Christian peace process in the Philippines, as positive representations of the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) shift dramatically and negatively after an armed clash in the remote municipality of Mamasapano. Our research innovates a methodological mix of qualitative and quantitative strategies to access natural data in the real world, obtain mathematical accuracy, and add discursive depth. We employ a sequential mixed methods strategy on a data corpus of 178 news reports about the BBL, 5 weeks before and 5 weeks after the Mamasapano clash. Text-mining calculations yield word association scores of support (range 57%–89%) and confidence (consistently 100%), indicating a high discursive overlap between BBL and Mamasapano. Computed word association maps also show how BBL is associated with positive words before Mamasapano and negative words after the military encounter. We end by raising practical questions on how to deal with representational contamination, and discuss issues of psychological containment in the public sphere.
format text
author Montiel, Cristina J
Dela Paz, Erwine
Custodio, Lissa
author_facet Montiel, Cristina J
Dela Paz, Erwine
Custodio, Lissa
author_sort Montiel, Cristina J
title Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
title_short Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
title_full Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
title_fullStr Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
title_full_unstemmed Representational contamination: How does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
title_sort representational contamination: how does an unexpected armed encounter psychologically stunt a peace process?
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2017
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/psychology-faculty-pubs/6
https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2017-08954-001
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