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Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations

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Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations. / Lee, Benjamin John; Knott, Kim.
Lancaster: Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats, 2018.

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsCommissioned report

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Lee BJ, Knott K. Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations. Lancaster: Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats, 2018.

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Lee, Benjamin John ; Knott, Kim. / Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations. Lancaster : Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats, 2018.

Bibtex

@book{0d5c31a11d7f4ed8811cd3de05bbfa84,
title = "Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations",
abstract = "This review analyses the available research on how ideology is communicated by political and religious organisations and networks. As in the earlier reviews in this series, our understanding of ideology is deliberately broad, and includes, values, ideas and practices, in both religious and political contexts. Academic research of relevance to ideological transmission has been carried out in diverse disciplines, and a thorough review of the concept requires working across a variety of fields in which different terminology has been used, for different ends. Key disciplines drawn on in this review have been political science, the study of religions, management and organisational studies, sociology, and media and communication studies. Two main communicative orientations have underpinned our review of the literature: (i) external awareness-raising by religious and political groups, and (ii) their internal attempts to influence members and supporters. Three analytical motifs have been identified as central for theorising how such groups transmit ideas, beliefs and values: propaganda, framing and learning. These are interconnected by the concept of {\textquoteleft}persuasion{\textquoteright}, more specifically the active attempts used by external agents to persuade individuals.",
keywords = "ideology, ideological transmission, political organisations, religious organisations, extremism",
author = "Lee, {Benjamin John} and Kim Knott",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
day = "10",
language = "English",
publisher = "Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations

AU - Lee, Benjamin John

AU - Knott, Kim

PY - 2018/9/10

Y1 - 2018/9/10

N2 - This review analyses the available research on how ideology is communicated by political and religious organisations and networks. As in the earlier reviews in this series, our understanding of ideology is deliberately broad, and includes, values, ideas and practices, in both religious and political contexts. Academic research of relevance to ideological transmission has been carried out in diverse disciplines, and a thorough review of the concept requires working across a variety of fields in which different terminology has been used, for different ends. Key disciplines drawn on in this review have been political science, the study of religions, management and organisational studies, sociology, and media and communication studies. Two main communicative orientations have underpinned our review of the literature: (i) external awareness-raising by religious and political groups, and (ii) their internal attempts to influence members and supporters. Three analytical motifs have been identified as central for theorising how such groups transmit ideas, beliefs and values: propaganda, framing and learning. These are interconnected by the concept of ‘persuasion’, more specifically the active attempts used by external agents to persuade individuals.

AB - This review analyses the available research on how ideology is communicated by political and religious organisations and networks. As in the earlier reviews in this series, our understanding of ideology is deliberately broad, and includes, values, ideas and practices, in both religious and political contexts. Academic research of relevance to ideological transmission has been carried out in diverse disciplines, and a thorough review of the concept requires working across a variety of fields in which different terminology has been used, for different ends. Key disciplines drawn on in this review have been political science, the study of religions, management and organisational studies, sociology, and media and communication studies. Two main communicative orientations have underpinned our review of the literature: (i) external awareness-raising by religious and political groups, and (ii) their internal attempts to influence members and supporters. Three analytical motifs have been identified as central for theorising how such groups transmit ideas, beliefs and values: propaganda, framing and learning. These are interconnected by the concept of ‘persuasion’, more specifically the active attempts used by external agents to persuade individuals.

KW - ideology

KW - ideological transmission

KW - political organisations

KW - religious organisations

KW - extremism

M3 - Commissioned report

BT - Ideological Transmission III: Political and Religious Organisations

PB - Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats

CY - Lancaster

ER -