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Journal Article

Citation

Canetti D, Cavari A, Rapaport C, Shalev H, Hobfoll SE. Terrorism Polit. Violence 2021; 33(5): 1055-1070.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/09546553.2019.1598389

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

How does exposure to terrorism affect political attitudes? This paper presents a new individual-level psychobiological model of political attitudes. Using a unique individual-level data of personal exposure to terrorism, a physiological marker of inflammation (CRP) and a psychological measure of perception of threat to an ongoing conflict--the Israel-Palestinian Conflict--we assess the effect of personal exposure to terrorism on militant attitudes concerning the conflict. Our data of physiological (blood samples), psychological, and attitudinal factors were collected in Israel during a military escalation along the Gaza Strip border. The findings reveal that among people personally exposed to terrorism, the perception of threat mediates an association between physiological conditions and militant attitudes. These findings contribute to the emerging literature on the biopolitics of political violence, suggesting a renewed focus on the dynamic interplay between physiological, psychological, and political factors.


Language: en

Keywords

CRP; Israeli-Palestinian conflict; personal exposure; physiological markers; political attitudes; Terrorism

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