在流离失所的叙利亚侨民样本中,防御性国家认同与支持集体暴力有关,与安全的国家认同形成鲜明对比

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL International Journal of Intercultural Relations Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ijintrel.2024.101954
Ramzi Abou-Ismail , Bjarki Gronfeldt , Gaelle Marinthe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文研究了叙利亚侨民样本(N = 521)中的国家认同和集体暴力信仰。大多数叙利亚侨民都是为了躲避正在进行的内战,因此反对阿萨德总统及其政权,而阿萨德总统及其政权仍控制着他们祖国的大部分地区。因此,一个引人注目的问题是,尽管流离失所,但散居国外者的民族认同感仍然很强,这是否会影响他们对国内政权的态度。为此,我们对比了民族自恋(即防御性民族认同)和民族认同(即安全的民族认同),前者是指夸大地相信自己民族的伟大,后者是指对民族的归属感和积极评价,两者是集体暴力信念的不同预测因素。我们发现,防御性国家认同与支持向上(即针对政权领导人的暴力)和分散(即针对政权支持者的暴力)集体暴力有关。与此同时,安全的国家认同与反对分散的集体暴力有关,而与向上的集体暴力无关。因此,在流离失所的非西裔美国人样本中,西方类似研究中经常发现的一种模式得到了复制,即安全的国家认同与仁慈、和平的群体进程有关。同时,民族自恋似乎是群体间敌对态度的驱动因素。因此,在讨论散居国外者对叙利亚祖国政权和同胞的态度时,民族情绪应占据中心位置。研究结果可用于设计干预措施,以促进世界各地侨民社区的和谐,并在最终恢复和平后实现和解。
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Defensive national identity relates to support for collective violence, in contrast to secure national identity, in a sample of displaced Syrian diaspora members

This paper examines national identities and collective violence beliefs in a sample of Syrian diaspora members (N = 521). Most of the Syria diaspora fled the ongoing civil war and are therefore opposed to President Assad and his regime, which still control most of their homeland. It is therefore a compelling question if national identities, which remain strong in the diaspora despite displacement, shape attitudes towards the regime at home. To this end, we contrast national narcissism (i.e., defensive national identity), an exaggerated belief in one’s national ingroup’s greatness, and national identification (i.e., secure national identity), a feeling of belonging to the nation and evaluating it positively, as differential predictors of collective violence beliefs. We find that a defensive national identity was related to support for both upward (i.e., violence targeted at regime leaders) and diffuse (i.e., violence targeted at regime supporters) collective violence. Meanwhile, secure national identity was linked to opposition to diffuse collective violence and was unrelated to upward collective violence. Thus, in a sample of displaced, non-WEIRD people, a pattern often found in similar research in the West is replicated, in that secure national identity can relate to benevolent and peaceful group processes. Meanwhile, national narcissism seems to be a driver of hostile intergroup attitudes. National sentiments should therefore be central in any discussion on diasporic attitudes towards the Syrian homeland’s regime and fellow citizens. The results could be utilised in designing interventions to promote harmony in diaspora communities around the world, and ultimately reconciliation once peace is finally restored.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
122
期刊介绍: IJIR is dedicated to advancing knowledge and understanding of theory, practice, and research in intergroup relations. The contents encompass theoretical developments, field-based evaluations of training techniques, empirical discussions of cultural similarities and differences, and critical descriptions of new training approaches. Papers selected for publication in IJIR are judged to increase our understanding of intergroup tensions and harmony. Issue-oriented and cross-discipline discussion is encouraged. The highest priority is given to manuscripts that join theory, practice, and field research design. By theory, we mean conceptual schemes focused on the nature of cultural differences and similarities.
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