Authors
Lusine Grigoryan, Vladimir Ponizovskiy, Shalom Schwartz
Publication date
2023/12
Journal
Journal of Social Issues
Volume
79
Issue
4
Pages
1440-1455
Description
This study explores the motivational drivers of violent extremism by examining references to motivational goals—values—in texts written by lone offenders. We present a new database of manifestos written by lone offenders (N = 103), the Extremist Manifesto Database (EMD). We apply a dictionary approach to examine references to values in this corpus. For comparison, we use texts from a matched quota sample of US American adults (N = 194). Compared to the general population, extremists referred more often to values of security, conformity, tradition, universalism, and power, and less often to values of benevolence, stimulation, and achievement. In extremist manifestos, ingroup descriptions referred more to security and universalism values, whereas power values dominated outgroup descriptions. Non‐extremists referred to the same values in conjunction with “us” and “them” (benevolence and self‐direction …
Total citations
Scholar articles