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Published byCurtis Kennedy Modified over 9 years ago
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Working with the Causal Model of Political Violence
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A “general theory” of political violence Psychological Pre-Conditions combine with Socio-Biological Factors Anthropological Concepts & Cases Economic Structures & Preconditions Scope Intensity Types of Political Violence Social Conditions Political Variables
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A “general theory” of political violence Psychological Pre-Conditions -Anomie -Frustration aggression -Contagion -Cognitive dissonance -Relative deprivation Biological Economic Preconditions -The dominance- submission nexus within society Scope Intensity Types of Political Violence -Assassination -Insurgency by groups -General turmoil -Civil War -Repression by the state Social Conditions -Justifications -nominative -utilitarian -Legitimacy -Socialization -Politicization -Institutional support -functional -institutional -Political symbols -Balance of coercion -resources -ideology -release mechanisms Political Variables Government Policies: short run vs. long run
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Where does the reading fit? PsychologicalSocialPolitical Eller, et al.Chaps. 1-4Chaps 5-7, 10Cases; and Chaps. 8-9 Taras & Ganguly ---------Chaps. 5-9Chaps. 1-4, 10 Collier, et al.Chaps. 1-2Chaps. 3-4Chaps. 5-6
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Psychological pre-conditions Anomie ( sociology – Durkheim ) Frustration – Aggression ( Psychology ) Cognitive Dissonance ( Psychology ) Contagion ( Social-Psych ) Relative Deprivation ( Social-Psych; PoliSci,Soc ) RD is rooted in perception (the relationship between expectation and actual capacity) Aspirational Decremental J - Curve
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Expectations increase while capacities remain static
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Expectations remain static while capacities decrease
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Both expectations and capacities increase for a time, but capacities plateau and then decrease
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Biological and socio-biological Charles Darwin – 19 th century claim of species competition and “survival of the fittest” – assuming such occurs from triumph, usually via force Are we instinctually (primordially) violent? Conrad Lorenz thought so; most anthropologists prove not so…we have lived too long without murder or organized violence Biological determinism: Suggests that as human animals, we are genetically determined to be violent Modified version: Some are genetically “predisposed” to violence
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Findings to date There is a psychobiology/or a psycho- biochemistry to this – and it is “selective”. Chemical imbalances are sufficient conditions to lead (stimulate) some to engage in violence When chemical mix with social and psychological stimuli, there is a high likelihood of violence In all situations these can be limited by social constraints “Tougher” finding relates to biochemical “high” derived from engaging in violence, the narcotic effect
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Where does variation by gender come in? Reality of testosterone The rest is learned (socialization) Does “mother instinct” drive some under poverty or despair to violence?
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Psycho-social ‘innate’ adjustment Robert Jay Lifton, in “The Nazi Doctors”, goes further than this....grotesque or large scale violence must have a full duality, with perpetrators operating in a different world: they must engage in “doubling”.
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Anthropological Excerpts from Foreign Affairs article of Jan/Feb ’06 by Robert M Sapolsky, “A Natural History of Peace”. What does the reading have to add? Consider the essays from Eller.
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Application: Brainstorm/discuss solutions Frustrated with recent explanations of political violence in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and elsewhere, the U.S. Government has issued a “call for proposals” which will examine “new and dynamic concepts which help explain problems of on-going violence in society”. A friend working in the White House has called and asked for input. Using Eller, et al. as a guide, what should we send her?
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A “general theory” of political violence Psychological Pre-Conditions -Anomie -Frustration aggression -Contagion -Cognitive dissonance -Relative deprivation Biological Economic Preconditions -The dominance- submission nexus within society Scope Intensity Types of Political Violence -Assassination -Insurgency by groups -General turmoil -Civil War -Repression by the state Social Conditions -Justifications -nominative -utilitarian -Legitimacy -Socialization -Politicization -Institutional support -functional -institutional -Political symbols -Balance of coercion -resources -ideology -release mechanisms Political Variables Government Policies: short run vs. long run
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Economic pre-conditions Economic structure of dominance- submission in relationships Real conditions filtered by perception (relative deprivation!) Competitive economic units (class) The societal conflict trap of Collier’s, “Breaking the Conflict Trap”
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Social conditions: What “fires us up” Justifications: utilitarian vs. normative Legitimacy Socialization Politicization Political symbols Support mechanisms: structural, cultural Resources, ideology, release mechanisms
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