The present study addresses antecedents and consequences of collective victimhood in the context of World War I (WWI) across 15 European nations (N = 2423 social science students). Using multilevel analysis, we find evidence that collective victimhood is still present a hundred years after the onset of the war and can be predicted by WWI-related objective indicators of victimization at national and family level...
In the article “A century of victimhood: Antecedentsand current impacts of perceived suffering in WorldWar I across Europe” (DOI: 100.1002/ejsp.2232)(Bouchat et al., 2017), published in the European Journalof Social Psychology, 47: 195:208, the affiliations for Silvia Mari, Nebojša Petrovic and Alice Krenn were provided incorrectly.