Canetti Daphna, Halperin Eran, Hobfoll Stevan E, Shapira Oren, Hirsch-Hoefler Sivan
Department of Political Science Council on Middle East Studies, The MacMillan Center and Department of Political Science Yale University, United States.
Int J Intercult Relat. 2009 Nov;33(6):463-474. doi: 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2008.12.007.
Major political events such as terrorist attacks and forced relocation of citizens may have an immediate effect on attitudes towards ethnic minorities associated with these events. The psychological process that leads to political exclusionism of minority groups was examined using a field study among Israeli settlers in Gaza days prior to the Disengagement Plan adopted by the Israeli government on June 6, 2004 and enacted in August 2005. Lending credence to integrated threat theory and to theory on authoritarianism, our analyses show that the positive effect of religiosity on political exclusionism results from the two-staged mediation of authoritarianism and perceived threat. We conclude that religiosity fosters authoritarianism, which in turn tends to move people towards exclusionism both directly and through the mediation of perceived threat.
诸如恐怖袭击和公民被迫搬迁等重大政治事件可能会对与这些事件相关的少数族裔态度产生直接影响。在2004年6月6日以色列政府通过并于2005年8月颁布的脱离接触计划实施前几天,对加沙地带的以色列定居者进行了一项实地研究,以此考察导致少数群体政治排外主义的心理过程。我们的分析支持整合威胁理论和威权主义理论,结果表明,宗教信仰对政治排外主义的积极影响源自威权主义和感知威胁的两阶段中介作用。我们得出结论,宗教信仰助长威权主义,而威权主义反过来又倾向于直接或通过感知威胁的中介作用使人们走向排外主义。