Religious radicalization: social appraisals and finding radical redemption in extreme beliefs
Publication date
2021-08
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Abstract
In this article, we review the psychology of religion and radicalization. In doing so, we note that both macro-level approaches (that study structural conditions in society) and micro-level approaches (that focus on psychological coping and personal appraisal of individual conditions) fail to adequately explain radical behavior of members of extreme religious groups. Instead, we propose that meso-level approaches best explain religious radicalization. These meso-level approaches explain how members of extreme religious groups appraise societal conditions and find redemption in radical beliefs. In particular, we argue for a more in-depth examination of the historical and societal contexts in which various radicalization processes take place and narratives of radical redemption hold sway.
Keywords
General Psychology
Citation
de Graaf, B A & Van den Bos, K 2021, 'Religious radicalization: social appraisals and finding radical redemption in extreme beliefs', Current Opinion in Psychology, vol. 40, pp. 56-60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2020.08.028