Institutional Conflict Settlement in Divided Societies: The Role of Subgroup Identities in Self-Government Arrangements [PDF]
Institutions can contribute to regulating interethnic conflict; however, in many cases they fail to bring about lasting peace. The paper argues that their negligence of intraethnic factors accounts for some of this failure.
De Juan, Alexander
core +2 more sources
Community Policing Solutions for Religion-on-Religion Conflict: Lessons from an Indian Case Study
UN peacekeepers face new conditions of conflict today, which call for expanded peacekeeping strategies. Among these new conditions is the increasing localization of violent conflict, especially among extra-state forces that are mobilized by ideological ...
Vineet Kapoor +4 more
doaj +1 more source
Negative and positive externalities in intergroup conflict: exposure to the opportunity to help the outgroup reduces the inclination to harm it. [PDF]
Outgroup hate, in the context of intergroup conflict, can be expressed by harming the outgroup, but also by denying it help. Previous work established that this distinction—whether the externality on the outgroup is negative or positive—has an important ...
Weisel O.
europepmc +3 more sources
Intergroup Conflict Escalation Leads to More Extremism [PDF]
Empirical findings in the intergroup conflict literature show that individuals’ beliefs that mark differentiation from out-groups become radicalized as intergroup tensions escalate.
Alizadeh, Meysam +3 more
core +1 more source
When the world collapses: changed worldview and social reconstruction in a traumatized community [PDF]
Background: Traumatic experience can affect the individual's basic beliefs about the world as a predictable and safe place. One of the cornerstones in recovery from trauma is reestablishment of safety, connectedness, and the shattered schema of a ...
Dinka Corkalo Biruski +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Intergroup Contact, Intergroup Anxiety, and Attitudes towards the Opposing Group in Divided Society
The negative attitudes and negative emotions play a key role in maintaining the hostilities between the groups of a divided society. Evidence suggests that intergroup contact can improve or worsen intergroup attitudes.
Mimoza Telaku
doaj
Inter-group conflict affects inter-brain synchrony during synchronized movements
Interpersonal synchrony refers to alignment in time of interacting individuals. Recent neuroimaging findings indicate that the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) — a core region of the observation-execution system — is not only activated during tasks that ...
H. Nathan Gamliel +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Intergroup struggles over victimhood in violent conflict: The victim-perpetrator paradigm [PDF]
Most groups in violent, intergroup conflict perceive themselves to be the primary or sole victims of that conflict. This often results in contention over who may claim victim status and complicates a central aim of post-conflict processes, which is to ...
Allport G +21 more
core +1 more source
In this theoretical review, the author examines intergroup conflicts and genocides in post New-Order Indonesia as the manifestation of politicised nationalism by employing several theoretical approaches. The theoretical review starts from combining micro
Rizqy Amelia Zein
doaj +1 more source
AbstractThe pervasiveness, persistence, and petrifying scope of intergroup conflict have fueled substantial scholarly interest in intergroup conflict across the social and biological sciences. Here we outline five questions that we hope students of intergroup conflict will undertake to research in years to come: (a) When and why do people engage in ...
Nir Halevy, Taya R. Cohen
openaire +1 more source

