TY - JOUR PY - 1999// TI - Do religious institutions support violence or the status quo? JO - Studies in conflict and terrorism A1 - Fox, Jeremy SP - 119 EP - 139 VL - 22 IS - 2 N2 - The literature on the role of religious institutions in ethnic conflict does not answer the question of whether these institutions support violence or the status quo. From a resource mobilization perspective, religious institutions generally have the organizational resources to facilitate opposition to the status quo. However, it is also clear that most religions at different times have supported both violence and the status quo. An analysis of 105 ethnoreligious minorities using data from the Minorities at Risk project shows that religious institutions tend to inhibit peaceful opposition unless there is a sufficient level of perceived threat to the religious institutions or the religion itself, in which case religious institutions tend to facilitate political opposition among ethno-religious minorities. However, the decision to violently oppose a regime is based mostly on secular factors including the desire for some form of autonomy or independence and political discrimination against the ethno-religious minority.
LA - en SN - 1057-610X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/105761099265793 ID - ref1 ER -