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RUMOR (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   179160


Practical Ideology in Militant Organizations / Parkinson, Sarah E   Journal Article
Parkinson, Sarah E Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Ideology shapes militant recruitment, organization, and conflict behavior. Existing research assumes doctrinal consistency, top-down socialization of adherents, and clear links between formal ideology and political action. But it has long been recognized that ideological commitments do not flow unaltered from overarching cleavages or elite narratives; they are uneven, contingent, fraught with tension, and often ambivalent. What work does ideology do in militant groups if it is not deeply studied, internalized, or sincerely believed? How can scholars explain collective commitment, affinity, and behavioral outcomes among militants who clearly associate themselves with a group, but who may not consistently (or ever) be true believers or committed ideologues? I argue that practical ideologies—sets of quotidian principles, ideas, and social heuristics that reflect relational worldviews rather than specific published political doctrines, positions, platforms, or plans—play a key role in militant socialization through everyday practices. Ethnographic evidence gained from fieldwork among Palestinians in Lebanon demonstrates how militants and affiliates render ideas about ideological closeness and distance accessible through emotional, intellectual, and moral appeals. This approach reaffirms the role of discourse and narrative in creating informal mechanisms of militant socialization without expressly invoking formal doctrine.
Key Words Insurgency  Ideology  Middle East  Ethnography  Nonstate Actors  Rebel Organizations 
Civil War  Gossip  Rumor 
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2
ID:   168789


Social Constructionism and the Significance of Political Rumors in Contemporary China : weapons of the weak / Tsai, Wen-Hsuan ; Lin, Zheng-Wei   Journal Article
Tsai, Wen-Hsuan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Rumors are a set of collective discussions used by cadres or the masses to attain specific goals. Both political elites and the general public reveal their dissatisfaction or concern with the Chinese Communist Party regime through the dissemination of politically charged rumors, fueled by the party-state system’s habit of withholding information and amplified by traditional Chinese superstition.
Key Words Hearsay  Popular Refrain  Prophetic Omen  Rumor  Social Constructionism 
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