RT Article T1 Symbolic Exclusion and Historical Negation Regarding the Indigenous Mapuche People: A Study of Their Moral and Ideological Causes in Chile JF Race and social problems VO 14 IS 4 SP 342 OP 356 A1 Castro, Manuel Cárdenas A2 Arancibia, Héctor A2 Bahamondes, Joaquín A2 Figueiredo, Ana LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1819843319 AB In this study we analyze distinct socio-political predictors, namely, system justification, moral foundations, political ideology, social dominance orientation and authoritarianism, of two distinct but interrelated postcolonial ideologies, namely symbolic exclusion and historical negation in regards to the Mapuche people, in a sample of the general Chilean population (n = 1.242). According to the results, symbolic exclusion is explained by the political ideology of the participants, their social dominance orientation, right-wing authoritarianism, system justification and one specific moral foundations’ dimension: harm/care. On the other hand, right-wing authoritarianism, system justification, political ideology, and two specific moral foundations (loyalty/betrayal and authority/subversion) play an important role in predicting the historical negation of negative events affecting the Mapuche Indigenous people in Chile. Our results are discussed in terms of their implications for present-day intergroup relations between the Mapuche and non-Indigenous Chileans. K1 Settler-colonialism K1 Political Ideology K1 System justification K1 Moral Foundations K1 Social Dominance K1 Right-wing authoritarianism K1 Postcolonial ideologies DO 10.1007/s12552-022-09358-3