eprintid: 10198791
rev_number: 12
eprint_status: archive
userid: 699
dir: disk0/10/19/87/91
datestamp: 2024-10-23 10:09:27
lastmod: 2025-01-02 12:04:55
status_changed: 2024-10-23 10:09:27
type: article
metadata_visibility: show
sword_depositor: 699
creators_name: Pischedda, Costantino
creators_name: Vogt, Manuel
title: When Do Religious Organizations Resort to Violence? How Local Conditions Shape the Effects of Transnational Ideology
ispublished: pub
divisions: UCL
divisions: B03
divisions: C03
divisions: F30
note: This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher’s terms and conditions.
abstract: Under what conditions do non-state actors with religious agendas resort to violence? Studies tackling this question typically examine global or local factors in isolation, while those advancing integrated arguments lack the data required for systematic tests across time and countries. We advance and test a theoretical framework combining transnational forces, domestic context, and actor-specific attributes. We argue that by 1979 a new transnational zeitgeist reached maturation, creating fertile ground for religion’s violence-endorsing side. Yet, the effect of this transnational ideological shift depends on its identity linkage with religious organizations and on domestic levels of corruption and religious repression. To test our argument, we leverage a new dataset on ethno-political organizations that provides yearly codings of organizations’ claims and use of violence, spanning all world regions in the years 1946-2013. The statistical analysis corroborates our hypotheses. Overall, ethno-political organizations making religious claims have been significantly more violence-prone after 1979 compared to before. Yet, this post-1979 effect of religious claims depends on local conditions. Specifically, their identity linkage with a particularly salient manifestation of the new zeitgeist – the Iranian Revolution – has made religious organizations from Muslim ethnic groups particularly prone to violence, whereas before 1979 they had been less violent than those without a religious agenda. Moreover, regardless of religious identity, higher levels of political corruption and repression of religious organizations entail a higher risk of anti-government violence by religious organizations after 1979, but not before.
date: 2025
date_type: published
publisher: Informa UK Limited
official_url: https://doi.org/10.1080/17449057.2023.2222253
oa_status: green
full_text_type: other
language: eng
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
verified: verified_manual
elements_id: 2329278
doi: 10.1080/17449057.2023.2222253
lyricists_name: Vogt, Manuel
lyricists_id: MVOGT76
actors_name: Vogt, Manuel
actors_id: MVOGT76
actors_role: owner
full_text_status: public
publication: Ethnopolitics
volume: 24
number: 1
pagerange: 1-26
issn: 1744-9057
citation:        Pischedda, Costantino;    Vogt, Manuel;      (2025)    When Do Religious Organizations Resort to Violence? How Local Conditions Shape the Effects of Transnational Ideology.                   Ethnopolitics , 24  (1)   pp. 1-26.    10.1080/17449057.2023.2222253 <https://doi.org/10.1080/17449057.2023.2222253>.       Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10198791/1/Vogt_Ethnopolitics_conditional%20acceptance_with%20bio.pdf