Strauss (2007). What is the relationship between hate radio and violence? Rethinking Rwanda's 'radio machete'. - Article summary
It is often thought that during the Rwandan genocide, the radio conditioned, facilitated and legitimized violence and became a tool for the mobilization of genocide. It is also often thought that the radio was a voice of authority.
The claim that the radio indirectly instilled ideas that led to violence and issued orders that directly led to mobilization have three primary weaknesses:
- The claims are incompatible with mainstream political communication research.
- The literature on Rwanda imply a simplistic and improbable model of agency.
- The discussions of media violence are often not situated in a broader discussion of the dynamics of violence or of an assessment of rival explanation.
The claims of the effect of the radio on the genocide in Rwanda reflect the hypodermic needle theory. There is often no attribution of agency to the listeners of the radio. The dynamics of violence are often simplified in the account that the radio is accountable for the genocide.
However, it is not clear what the effects of the radio were exactly and it is possible that the radio did not reach all areas where violence against Tutsis occurred. The onset of violence in Rwanda was not simultaneously.
The broadcast range of the radio cannot account for the time of onset of the violence, meaning that the radio cannot be the sole trigger of the genocide. It might have been the case that the radio served to bolster and encourage those who were committing violence.
Perpetrators often claim that the radio was not the primary cause of joining in actions to commit genocide. Face-to-face mobilization and social ties were the primary factors through which ordinary citizens joined the genocide. However, it is possible that the radio catalysed the more hard core among the broader pool of perpetrators. The radio, most likely, had conditional and marginal effects.
The war in Rwanda led to legitimization of the killings (1) and created a sense of uncertainty and fear (2). This led some people to become radicalized and led others to believe killing was necessary.
The media effects were probably catalysing hard-liners (1), reinforcing messages (2) and framing public choice (3).
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Political Psychology - Article summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
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Political Psychology - Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
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Political Psychology - Article summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
- Hammack & Pilecki (2012). Narrative as a root metaphor for Political Psychology - Article summary
- Van Zomeren, Spears, Fischer, & Leach (2004). Put your money where your mouth is! Explaining collective action tendencies through group-based anger and group efficacy - Article summary
- Wright, Taylor, & Moghaddam (1990). Responding to membership in a disadvantaged group: From acceptance to collective protest. - Article summary
- Deaux, Reid, Martin, & Bikmen (2006). Ideologies of diversity and inequality: Predicting collective action in groups varying in ethnicity and immigrant status - Article summary
- Klandermans, van der Toorn, & van Stekelenburg (2008). Embeddedness and Identity: How immigrants turn grievances into action. - Article summary
- Reicher (1996). 'The battle of Westminster': Developing the social identity model of crowd behaviour in order to explain the initiation and development of collective conflict. - Article summary
- Reicher (2016). "La beauté est dans la rue". Four reasons (or perhaps five) to study crowds. - Article summary
- Feddes, Mann, & Doosje (2015). Increasing self-esteem and empathy to prevent violent radicalization: a longitudinal quantitative evaluation of a resilience training focused on adolescents with a dual identity. - Article summary
- Heath-Kelly (2012). Counter-terrorism and the counterfactual: Producing the radicalisation discourse and the UK PREVENT strategy. - Article summary
- Pyszczynski et al. (2006). Mortality salience, martyrdom, and military might: The great satan versus the axis of evil - Article summary
- Webber et al. (2018). The road to extremism: Field and experimental evidence that significance loss-induced need for closure fosters radicalization - Article summary
- Bar-Tal (2007). Sociopsychological foundations of intractable conflicts. - Article summary
- Halperin (2008). Group-based hatred in intractable conflict in Israel. - Article summary
- Mastroianni (2015). Obedience in perspective: Psychology and the holocaust - Article summary
- Strauss (2007). What is the relationship between hate radio and violence? Rethinking Rwanda's 'radio machete'. - Article summary
- Cehajic, Brown, & Castano (2008). Forgive and forget? Antecedents and consequences of intergroup forgiveness in Bosnia and Herzegovina. - Article summary
- Hornsey & Wohl (2013). We are sorry: Intergroup apologies and their tenuous link with intergroup forgiveness. - Article summary
- Hornsey et al. (2017). Conservatives are more reluctant to give and receive apologies than liberals - Article summary
- Rimé et al. (2011). The impact of gacaca tribunals in Rwanda: Psychosocial effects of participation in a truth and reconciliation process after a genocide." "Cho (2013). Campaign tone, political affect and communicative engagement. - Article summary
- Cho (2013). Campaign tone, political affect and communicative engagement. - Article summary
- Marcus, MacKuen, & Neuman (2011). Parsimony and complexity: Developing and testing theories of affective intelligence. - Article summary
- Lecheler, Schuck, & de Vreese (2013). Dealing with feelings: Positive and negative discrete emotions as mediators of news framing effects. - Article summary
- Stolwijk, Schuck, & de Vreese (2016). How anxiety and enthusiasm help explain the bandwagon effect. - Article summary
- Political Psychology - Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
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Political Psychology - Article summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
This bundle contains everything you need to know for the course "Political Psychology" taught at the University of Amsterdam. It contains the following articles:
"Hammack & Pilecki (2012). Narrative as a root metaphor for Political Psychology".
"Van Zomeren
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