Refine
Year of publication
- 2005 (1)
- (1)
Document Type
- Book (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Keywords
- Gewalt (2) (remove)
Institute
- Fachbereich 1 (1)
- Rechtswissenschaft (1)
Islamismus, Kulturkonflikt, Terrorismus - was sind die Bedingungen von Eskalation und Deeskalation?
(2005)
In dem öffentlichen Diskurs über Gewalteskalation konkurrieren bislang zwei Erklärungsmuster: die deprivationstheoretische Erklärung, derzufolge wahrgenommene Benachteiligung für die Gewaltbereitschaft ursächlich, und die kulturalistische Erklärung, derzufolge unverträgliche kulturelle Traditionen zu fortschreitenden Spannungen und Konflikten führen, die schließlich auch mit Mitteln des Terrorismus ausgetragen werden können. Nun wissen wir, dass Benachteiligung in vielen Fällen nicht zur Revolte führt und ganz unterschiedliche kulturelle Traditionen durchaus friedlich nebeneinander existieren können. Hier soll darum eine dritte konflikt- theoretische Erklärung vorgestellt werden: Gruppenkonflikte, wie immer sie entstanden sind und worum immer sie gehen, enden in der Gewalt, wenn sie nicht in Institutionen aufgefangen werden.
Why they rebel peacefully: On the violence-reducing effects of a positive attitude towards democracy
Under the impression of Europe’s drift into Nazism and Stalinism in the first half of the 20th century, social psychological research has focused strongly on dangers inherent in people’s attachment to a political system. The dissertation at hand contributes to a more differentiated perspective by examining violence-reducing aspects of political system attachment in four consecutive steps: First, it highlights attachment to a social group as a resource for violence prevention on an intergroup level. The results suggest that group attachment fosters self-control, a well-known protective factor against violence. Second, it demonstrates violence-reducing influences of attachment on a societal level. The findings indicate that attachment to a democracy facilitate peaceful and prevent violent protest tendencies. Third, it introduces the concept of political loyalty, defined as a positive attitude towards democracy, in order to clarify the different approaches of political system attachment. A set of three studies show the reliability and validity of a newly developed political loyalty questionnaire that distinguishes between affective and cognitive aspects. Finally, the dissertation differentiates former findings with regard to protest tendencies using the concept of political loyalty. A set of two experiments show that affective rather than cognitive aspects of political loyalty instigate peaceful protest tendencies and prevent violent ones. Implications of this dissertation for political engagement and peacebuilding as well as avenues for future research are discussed.