2021
DOI: 10.1037/pac0000460
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Religiosity and perceived religious discrimination as predictors of support for suicide attacks among Muslim Americans.

Abstract: Some argue that religiosity is one of the main causes of religious extremist violence, such as suicide attacks, while others propose that adverse circumstances associated with religiosity like perceived religious discrimination are responsible. Directly comparing these two perspectives, we investigated how religiosity (personal importance of religion, prayer frequency, religious service attendance, religious fundamentalism) and perceived religious discrimination predict support for suicide attacks in 2 samples… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…To mention one example of a remarkable multidisciplinary limitation, a search of Google Scholar using the keywords “Islam,” “Muslim,” or “Muslim American” resulted in academic literature mentioning extremism, terrorism, or suicide bombings. This was true for “psychology,” “psychiatry” (Aysha, 2017; Beller & Kröger, 2020; Ginges et al, 2011; Victoroff et al, 2012), “sociology” (Ali, 2014; Brym & Hamlin, 2009; Tosini, 2009), and “anthropology” (Aggarwal, 2010; Andriolo, 2002; Asad, 2007; Caldararo, 2006; Post et al, 2009; Stack, 2004). These results indicate the strong influence of a biased academic algorithm, selective publishing, and political interest.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…To mention one example of a remarkable multidisciplinary limitation, a search of Google Scholar using the keywords “Islam,” “Muslim,” or “Muslim American” resulted in academic literature mentioning extremism, terrorism, or suicide bombings. This was true for “psychology,” “psychiatry” (Aysha, 2017; Beller & Kröger, 2020; Ginges et al, 2011; Victoroff et al, 2012), “sociology” (Ali, 2014; Brym & Hamlin, 2009; Tosini, 2009), and “anthropology” (Aggarwal, 2010; Andriolo, 2002; Asad, 2007; Caldararo, 2006; Post et al, 2009; Stack, 2004). These results indicate the strong influence of a biased academic algorithm, selective publishing, and political interest.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Also, with the emphasis on counternarratives, the suggestion has been that religion is a basis for extremism (Choudhury, 2017;De Koning, 2020). As efforts specifically focused on Jihadist published: 14 July 2021 inspired forms of radicalizations in P/CVE efforts, resentment increased among a significant share of Muslims that Islamic schools of thought are equated with hostility, violence, and terrorism, and these schools of thought are considered subject of countering and replacement with alternative worldviews (Rashid, 2014;Beller and Kröger, 2020). Not just specific individuals or organizations but communities and religion as a whole have thereby become subjected to security scrutiny (Ragazzi, 2017;Spalek and Weeks, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%