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Judi Lynn

(162,385 posts)
Mon Jun 11, 2018, 10:31 PM Jun 2018

A TRIBAL CALL TO ARMS: PROPAGANDA AND WHAT PVE CAN LEARN FROM ANTHROPOLOGY, PSYCHOLOGY AND NEUROSCIE

A TRIBAL CALL TO ARMS: PROPAGANDA AND WHAT PVE CAN LEARN FROM ANTHROPOLOGY, PSYCHOLOGY AND NEUROSCIENCE
June 6, 2018

By Alexander Ritzmann

The Propaganda Process

Is online propaganda really effective? How can it be countered? And what can practitioners of Preventing Violent Extremism (PVE) and policymakers learn from the research findings of other relevant disciplines, such as anthropology, psychology and neuroscience?

Propaganda, understood here as the strategic communication of ideas aiming at manipulating specific target audiences for an extremist cause, generally has three main components. First, it provides a diagnosis of “what is wrong”. Secondly, a prognosis of “what needs to be done”. Thirdly, a rationale – “who should do it and why” (Wilson 1973).

The self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS), for example, claims that Islam and Sunni Muslims are under attack (diagnosis), that a Caliphate needs to be created (prognosis), and that YOU need to help in any way you can (rationale).

Right wing movements use the same approach. In their diagnosis, migration and corrupt elites are a threat to the white or national identity. The prognosis is that only homogeneous societies with high walls can ensure survival. Then they ask their target audiences to join the fight in any way they can.

More:
http://www.voxpol.eu/a-tribal-call-to-arms-propaganda-and-what-pve-can-learn-from-anthropology-psychology-and-neuroscience/

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A TRIBAL CALL TO ARMS: PROPAGANDA AND WHAT PVE CAN LEARN FROM ANTHROPOLOGY, PSYCHOLOGY AND NEUROSCIE (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2018 OP
Wow, this is from the link: JoeOtterbein Jun 2018 #1
More from the article, appalachiablue Jun 2018 #2
Everyone on DU should read this JoeOtterbein Jun 2018 #3
This post needs more DU recs ASAP! Please read! JoeOtterbein Jun 2018 #4

JoeOtterbein

(7,789 posts)
1. Wow, this is from the link:
Mon Jun 11, 2018, 10:36 PM
Jun 2018
Strong psychological draws are part of the process. Those who do join extremist groups often project the fulfillment of their emotional needs onto these groups. Young men seeking adventure and social standing are promised a future as heroes fighting for a just cause. Women are promised an important role as the wives of the “lions of the Caliphate”, securing its future by raising their “cubs”, or, on the right, as the “mothers of the nation”, safeguarding the future of the white race.

appalachiablue

(42,908 posts)
2. More from the article,
Mon Jun 11, 2018, 10:53 PM
Jun 2018

Propaganda Is a Tribal Call to Arms
What exactly is the role of propaganda in this context? Social psychology research findings indicate that propaganda is a “tribal” call, aiming to establish clear red lines between “us” and “them”. This call appeals to one of our most basic instincts – belonging to a group.
Psychological experiments on “social identity”, replicated over decades, show that humans form groups very easily (Ratner 2012). For our in-group to feel real, we need an out-group that is different and less attractive to us. In a state of competitiveness, over resources or the moral high ground, we then easily dismiss the “others” as being wrong, stupid, violent or dangerous.
This is what we see in extremist calls to arms. Extremist propaganda claims that competition is plainly evident, that the threat from the “others” is real, and that you need to act if you want to be a good member of that group.

JoeOtterbein

(7,789 posts)
3. Everyone on DU should read this
Mon Jun 11, 2018, 10:53 PM
Jun 2018

This is one of the best links I've ever read on DU. Thanks Judi !

More from the link:

Neuroscientific experiments have shown that if someone’s core beliefs and identity are threatened by conflicting information, be it factual or emotional, the amygdala, the fight / flight / freeze part of our brains, takes control (Kaplan 2016). Put differently, the same part of our brain that makes decisions if we encounter a grizzly bear in the woods is in charge when someone tries to convince us that we are all wrong and need to let go of our group identity. This indicates that for the extremist, even a well-intended intervention by a PVE practitioner might be perceived as a serious threat to the individual’s identity and wellbeing.
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