SUPPORT FOR ETHNO-RELIGIOUS VIOLENCE IN INDONESIA

Authors

  • Tri Subagya Universitas Sanata Dharma

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14203/jmi.v41i2.342

Keywords:

ethnicity, religion, ethno-religious identification, support for violence, perceived group threat, religiocentrism, nationalism

Abstract

This study focused on the relationship between ethno-religious identification and support for intergroup violence in Indonesia. It employed a cross-cultural comparative research design involving Muslim and Christian respondents from different ethnic groups in two research areas. One of these areas, Ambon, experiences frequent eruptions of inter-group violence, while the other, Yogyakarta, is relatively peaceful; while disputes have occurred occasionally, they have not led to massive intergroup violence. This research used a mixture of quantitative and qualitative approaches This study finds stronger identification with religion than with ethnicity. Muslims show greater ethno-religious identification than Christians. It also presents evidence for the proposition regarding religiocentrism in which a positive evaluation of the religious in-group is related to in-group identification and induces derogatory attitudes towards out-groups. The findings are also consistent with propositions concerning nationalistic attitudes which suggest that increased ethno-religious identification reduces nationalism.

 

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Published

2015-12-19

How to Cite

Subagya, T. (2015). SUPPORT FOR ETHNO-RELIGIOUS VIOLENCE IN INDONESIA. Masyarakat Indonesia, 41(2), 190–199. https://doi.org/10.14203/jmi.v41i2.342