What drives violent extremism?

Inter5WASHINGTON. — Why do people become violent extremists? You might speculate that the answer is poverty. George W. Bush thought so: “We fight against poverty because hope is an answer to terror.” Or you might think a lack of education explains it. Laura Bush thought so: “A lasting victory in the war against terror depends on educating the world’s children.”

Neither of these answers is correct, however. Most extremists, including those who commit violence, are not poor and do not lack education.

Suicide bombers are likely to have more income and more education than most people in their home nation, research shows. A few years after the attacks of September 11, people in Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan and Turkey with higher than average incomes were no less likely to say that suicide attacks against Westerners were justified.

People with more education were actually more likely to reach that conclusion.

Similarly, among Palestinians, support for violence against Israeli targets is pervasive — not lower among people with relatively high earnings and education than it is among those who are illiterate and unemployed.

In light of these findings, Princeton economist Alan Krueger says: “To understand who joins terrorist organisations, instead of asking who has a low salary and few opportunities, we should ask: Who holds strong political views and is confident enough to try to impose an extremist vision by violent means?”

That’s the right question. And at least part of the answer comes from social dynamics, as illuminated by some old, and seemingly far afield, experiments in group psychology.

The original experiments, conducted in 1961 by James Stoner, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, worked as follows. A number of Americans were assembled into groups and asked whether they would like to take certain hypothetical risks — to try a new job, to invest in a foreign country, to escape from a prisoner- of-war camp, or to run for political office. As it turned out, participation in group decision-making made people more inclined to take such risks.

Stoner’s findings were later replicated by many others, leading to the conclusion that when people act in groups, they experience what Stoner called a “risky shift.”

But later studies drew this conclusion into serious question. Answering many of the same questions on which Americans displayed a risky shift, citizens of Taiwan displayed a shift toward greater caution. How come?

Everything depends on the group members’ original inclinations. When people are initially disposed toward risk-taking, their discussions lead them further in that direction. — Bloomberg News.

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