A new paper in International Journal of Social Psychology coauthored by our lab members!

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The authors tested motivations and conditions of helping intention towards refugees from Ukraine in three Central European countries. The aim was twofold: to test how personal, moral and politicized motivation predicted sustainability of helping, and how these motivations were connected to conditionality of helping, specifically to stereotypical expectations of refugees to fit the image of the helpless but grateful help recipients. They anticipated that helpers with politicized motivation have lower stereotypical expectations of refugees than those with personal motivation, while lower personal motivation predicts higher long-term engagement, mediated by fewer stereotypical expectations. Our online survey in Hungary (n = 2,261), Slovakia (n = 712) and Poland (n = 402) targeted people who were active in helping Ukrainian refugees. Politicized motivation predicted lower stereotypical expectations in Hungary but not in the Slovakia and Poland. Personal motivation predicted higher stereotypical expectations, which in turn predicted lower long-term prosocial action in all contexts. Authors argue that helpers who apply a double standard in helping to a lesser extent (by lower stereotypical expectations of refugees) would sustain their engagement more.

The article is available here – check it out! https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02134748251376978