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Xenophobia

The term xenophobia derives from the union of two Ancient Greek words – ξένος (xénos), meaning stranger or guest and φόβος (phobos), meaning fear or repulsion. Nowadays, it is used to describe an indiscriminate feeling of fear and hatred resulting in intolerant and hostile behaviour towards those who are categorised as foreigners from a national ...
Amy K. Marks   +3 more
  +12 more sources

Xenophobia

The Counseling Psychologist, 2008
Abstract The Maltese Falcon relies on a miseen-scène stripped down to the objects that “count.” Unlike many films, it does not offer what Seymour Chatman finds typical of the cinema, “a plenitude of visual details, an excessive particularity,” a “visual ‘over-specification.’” Instead, Huston’s film often resembles a cartoon: everything ...
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Race, Xenophobia, and Punitiveness Among the American Public

open access: yesSociological Quarterly, 2018
We outline four connections between xenophobia and punitiveness toward criminals in a national sample of Americans. First, among self-identified whites xenophobia is more predictive of punitiveness than specific forms of racial animus. Second, xenophobia
Joseph O Baker   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Why Xenophobia?

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2019
Xenophobia is deeply entwined with racism but nevertheless maintains a life of its own. Focusing on the structural drivers of xenophobia in the United States, this essay asks what xenophobia accomplishes that racism alone does not. It posits that while xenophobia serves many purposes, one of its most significant functions is to legitimize the very ...
openaire   +1 more source

Xenophilia or Xenophobia: Toward a Theology of Migration

The Ecumenical Review, 2012
The Bible’s first confession of faith begins with a story of pilgrimage and migration: “A wandering Aramean was my ancestor; he went down into Egypt and lived there as an alien” (Deuteronomy 26: 5). We might ask, did that “wandering Aramean” and his children have the proper documents to reside in Egypt? Were they “illegal aliens”?
openaire   +1 more source

Xenophobia

1997
Abstract Even during times of plenty, landowners view strangers with suspicion. Lions, ants, and humans are among the many species that exhibit xenophobia. There’s disdain for the unfamiliar, for members of a different group, immigrants, foreigners. Kin are favored over nonkin.
Carol Cunningham, Joel Berger
openaire   +1 more source

The Role of the Family for Racism and Xenophobia in Childhood and Adolescence

Review of General Psychology, 2022
Tuğçe Aral   +2 more
exaly  

The mediating role of tolerance in the relationship between cultural intelligence and xenophobia

Asia Pacific Education Review, 2021
Kasim Karatas, Ibrahim Arpaci
exaly  

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