Abstract
The present study seeks to explain individual differences in self-reported politically motivated violence and vandalism, and participation within an extreme right-wing group. While violent extremism is highly debated, few criminological studies explicitly test factors that can trigger violent extremism. The present study addresses this gap by integrating two different frameworks: a perceived injustice and group threat-initiated model and an impulsivity-initiated model. We also investigate several intervening mechanisms. We draw on a sample of 705 adolescents and young adults living in Flanders, Belgium to test the strength of direct and intermediary effects of perceived injustice, perceptions of out-group threat from Jewish populations, ethnocentrism, feelings of superiority, moral support for right-wing extremism, and exposure to racist peers on politically motivated violence and vandalism. Results of structural equation models (SEM) indicate various direct and intermediary effects between both perceived injustice and violent extremism, and between impulsivity and violent extremism. Our model reveals the complex and intricate antecedents of violent extremism. Importantly, we find that feelings of injustice and unfair treatment are a major source of extremist violence, as they easily trigger often debated causes such as high in-group identification and ethnocentrism. Implications of these findings for preventing violent extremism are discussed, given the centrality of perceptions of injustice and threat.
Acknowledgement
For access to the supplementary materials, please contact Lieven Pauwels at Lieven.Pauwels@UGent.be.
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© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Extremism, Radicalization and Terrorism: Editorial
- Micro and macro-level risk factors for extremism and terrorism: Toward a criminology of extremist violence
- Perceived injustice, perceived group threat and self-reported right-wing violence: An integrated approach
- Does context matter? European-specific risk factors for radicalization
- Pathways to radicalization in adolescence: The development of ideological beliefs, acceptance of violence, and extremist behavior
- Left-wing extremist violence: Risk and protective factors in a targeted sample of potential extremists
- Radicalization potentials of young Muslims in prison: What role do religious factors play?
- The families of Dutch terrorist suspects: Risk and protective factors among parents and siblings
- Psychological Differences between Radicalized and non-Radicalized Muslim Prisoners: A Qualitative Analysis of their Frame Alignment
- Concept of and approaches toward a developmental prevention of radicalization: Promising strategies to keep young people away from political, religious, and other forms of extremism
- The Phoenix Model of Disengagement and Deradicalisation from Terrorism and Violent Extremism
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Extremism, Radicalization and Terrorism: Editorial
- Micro and macro-level risk factors for extremism and terrorism: Toward a criminology of extremist violence
- Perceived injustice, perceived group threat and self-reported right-wing violence: An integrated approach
- Does context matter? European-specific risk factors for radicalization
- Pathways to radicalization in adolescence: The development of ideological beliefs, acceptance of violence, and extremist behavior
- Left-wing extremist violence: Risk and protective factors in a targeted sample of potential extremists
- Radicalization potentials of young Muslims in prison: What role do religious factors play?
- The families of Dutch terrorist suspects: Risk and protective factors among parents and siblings
- Psychological Differences between Radicalized and non-Radicalized Muslim Prisoners: A Qualitative Analysis of their Frame Alignment
- Concept of and approaches toward a developmental prevention of radicalization: Promising strategies to keep young people away from political, religious, and other forms of extremism
- The Phoenix Model of Disengagement and Deradicalisation from Terrorism and Violent Extremism