Support to military or humanitarian counterterrorism interventions: The effect of interpersonal and intergroup attitudes

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Abstract

Recently, new interest in terrorism and psychological factors related to supporting the war on terrorism has been growing in the field of psychology. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of various socio-political attitudes on the level of agreement with military and humanitarian counterterrorism interventions. 270 Italian participants responded to a news article concerning measures against terrorism. Half of the participants read an article regarding a military intervention while the other half read about a humanitarian intervention. They then evaluated the other type of intervention. Results showed that military intervention was supported by people with high authoritarian, dominant, ethnocentric attitudes and by people who attach importance to both positive and negative reciprocity norms. Instead, none of these variables was correlated with humanitarian intervention. Finally, there was a considerable influence of media on the acceptance of both interventions.

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Passini, S., & Battistelli, P. (2014). Support to military or humanitarian counterterrorism interventions: The effect of interpersonal and intergroup attitudes. International Journal of Psychological Research, 7(1), 19–29. https://doi.org/10.21500/20112084.664

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