Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims

Although many different models of radicalization integrate different intrapersonal, interpersonal, and intergroup processes, this interactive approach is scarcely present in the empirical studies. The goal of this study was to fill this gap by combining personality traits (Machiavellianism), ideolog...

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Main Authors: Tomislav Pavlović, Ingrid Storm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2020-12-01
Series:International Review of Social Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rips-irsp.com/articles/439
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spelling doaj-1c70e4594b7c4228940842741ea591e22021-01-11T05:21:57ZengUbiquity PressInternational Review of Social Psychology2397-85702020-12-0133110.5334/irsp.439104Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among MuslimsTomislav Pavlović0Ingrid Storm1Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, ZagrebDepartment for Social Policy, Sociology, and Criminology in the School of Social Policy, University of Birmingham, BirminghamAlthough many different models of radicalization integrate different intrapersonal, interpersonal, and intergroup processes, this interactive approach is scarcely present in the empirical studies. The goal of this study was to fill this gap by combining personality traits (Machiavellianism), ideology (Islamism), and outcomes of intergroup comparisons (perceived deprivations) as predictors of support for Daesh among Muslims in the MENA region, based on Arab Barometer IV data. Results were calculated on the overall sample and on synthetically balanced samples from Algeria and Palestine, respectively, to ensure the robustness of findings. While Islamists were generally supportive of Daesh, socio-politically deprived individuals were not. A negative relationship between Machiavellianism and support for Daesh was found only in Algeria. Multiple interactions, which differed in Algeria and Palestine, confirm the relevance of studying complex relationships among potential predictors of extremism, as well as the role of context that can strengthen or diminish these relationships.https://www.rips-irsp.com/articles/439extremismpolitical violenceinequalityideologymachiavellianism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tomislav Pavlović
Ingrid Storm
spellingShingle Tomislav Pavlović
Ingrid Storm
Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
International Review of Social Psychology
extremism
political violence
inequality
ideology
machiavellianism
author_facet Tomislav Pavlović
Ingrid Storm
author_sort Tomislav Pavlović
title Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
title_short Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
title_full Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
title_fullStr Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
title_full_unstemmed Machiavellianism, Islamism, and Deprivations as Predictors of Support for Daesh Among Muslims
title_sort machiavellianism, islamism, and deprivations as predictors of support for daesh among muslims
publisher Ubiquity Press
series International Review of Social Psychology
issn 2397-8570
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Although many different models of radicalization integrate different intrapersonal, interpersonal, and intergroup processes, this interactive approach is scarcely present in the empirical studies. The goal of this study was to fill this gap by combining personality traits (Machiavellianism), ideology (Islamism), and outcomes of intergroup comparisons (perceived deprivations) as predictors of support for Daesh among Muslims in the MENA region, based on Arab Barometer IV data. Results were calculated on the overall sample and on synthetically balanced samples from Algeria and Palestine, respectively, to ensure the robustness of findings. While Islamists were generally supportive of Daesh, socio-politically deprived individuals were not. A negative relationship between Machiavellianism and support for Daesh was found only in Algeria. Multiple interactions, which differed in Algeria and Palestine, confirm the relevance of studying complex relationships among potential predictors of extremism, as well as the role of context that can strengthen or diminish these relationships.
topic extremism
political violence
inequality
ideology
machiavellianism
url https://www.rips-irsp.com/articles/439
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