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ID115346
Title ProperPsychology of threat in intergroup conflict
Other Title Informationemotions, rationality, and opportunity in the Rwandan genocide
LanguageENG
AuthorMcDoom, Omar Shahabudin
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)How do security threats mobilize social groups against each other? The strength of such threats lies in the power of group emotions, notably the primary emotion of fear. Fear works by activating psychological processes at the group level that polarize attitudes between different groups. An analysis of survey data, radio broadcasts, and interviews from Rwanda's civil war and genocide of 1990-94 reveals four psychosocial mechanisms at work in group polarization: boundary activation, outgroup derogation, outgroup homogenization, and ingroup cohesion. Additionally, scholarly debates on the role of emotions, material opportunities, and rationality in ethnic conflicts represent a false theoretical choice. Both emotions and material opportunities matter, and rationality and emotion are not incompatible. Two simple refinements to extant theoretical and empirical approaches are needed. First, scholars ought to distinguish between attitudes and violence in ethnic conflicts; emotions matter for the polarization of attitudes, but material and structural opportunities mediate their expression as violence. Second, scholars should pay greater attention to the extensive research in social psychology that shows that both emotion and reason interact in individual judgment and decisionmaking.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Security Vol. 37, No.2; Fall 2012: p.119-155
Journal SourceInternational Security Vol. 37, No.2; Fall 2012: p.119-155
Key WordsSecurity Threats ;  Social Groups ;  Group Polarization ;  Ethnic Conflicts ;  Violence


 
 
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