2016
DOI: 10.5964/ejop.v12i1.1001
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You are the real terrorist and we are just your puppet: Using individual and group factors to explain Indonesian muslims’ attributions of causes of terrorism

Abstract: The current study investigates the role of individual and intergroup factors in predicting Muslims’ tendency to attribute domestic terrorism in Indonesia to an external cause (i.e., The West) or an internal cause (i.e., radical Islamist groups). The results (N = 308) showed that intergroup factors of symbolic threat and realistic threat directly increased the external attribution and conversely decreased the internal attribution. Within the context of the current research, symbolic threat refers to Muslims’ pe… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…This observation suggests that Islamic fundamentalism generates Muslims' negative stereotypes of the West because of its role in promoting Muslims' perception that their group and the West clash. This argument is aligned with prior research (e.g., Mashuri, Akhrani et al, 2016) demonstrating that Muslim fundamentalists are very concerned about how the interests of the West are incongruent with those of Muslims, and this perceived conflict in turn give rises to Muslims' antagonism against the West. Implicatively, Islamic fundamentalism is not directly associated with radicalism, as evidenced in the current research in which it was the most distal predictor of aggressive tendencies.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationssupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…This observation suggests that Islamic fundamentalism generates Muslims' negative stereotypes of the West because of its role in promoting Muslims' perception that their group and the West clash. This argument is aligned with prior research (e.g., Mashuri, Akhrani et al, 2016) demonstrating that Muslim fundamentalists are very concerned about how the interests of the West are incongruent with those of Muslims, and this perceived conflict in turn give rises to Muslims' antagonism against the West. Implicatively, Islamic fundamentalism is not directly associated with radicalism, as evidenced in the current research in which it was the most distal predictor of aggressive tendencies.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…However, the existing social-psychological research demonstrates mixed results regarding the relationship between religious fundamentalism and negative stereotypes. The two constructs have been found to be positively related (e.g., Altemeyer & Hunsberger, 1992), but they could be unrelated (e.g., Mashuri, Akhrani, & Zaduqisti, 2016) and even negatively related (e.g., Beller & Kröger, 2017).…”
Section: The Role Of Islamic Fundamentalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
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