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Political Research Quarterly
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Life, Pocketbook, or Culture: The Role of Perceived Security Threats in Promoting Exclusionist Political Attitudes toward Minorities in Israel

Daphna Canetti-Nisim*, Gal Ariely, and Eran Halperin

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dcanetti{at}nd.edu.


   Abstract
This article tests the role played by different sources of threat perception in shaping exclusionist political attitudes of the majority toward two distinct minority groups in Israel: non-Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union and Palestinian citizens of Israel. The authors distinguish between the impact of security, economic, and symbolic threats on exclusionist political attitudes. A structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis indicated that regardless of the different levels of each threat posed by a minority group, a perceived security threat is a key predictor of exclusionist political attitudes toward different minority groups.

First published on October 6, 2007, doi:10.1177/1065912907307289

Political Research Quarterly 2008;61:90.

A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2008


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Home page
Journal of Conflict ResolutionHome page
D. Canetti-Nisim, E. Halperin, K. Sharvit, and S. E. Hobfoll
A New Stress-Based Model of Political Extremism: Personal Exposure to Terrorism, Psychological Distress, and Exclusionist Political Attitudes
Journal of Conflict Resolution, June 1, 2009; 53(3): 363 - 389.
[Abstract] [PDF]