Triggers of Violence in New Religious Movements
Abstract
This thesis investigates whether New Religious Movements (NRM) share certain attributes (i.e., characteristics) that might help determine their propensity for violence. The goal was a model that a government or civil authority could use to analyze a budding religious movement to determine whether it might become violent. The research includes only post-World War II NRMs, and religious sects were excluded. A review of relevant literature on NRMs and religious violence highlighted 10 characteristics that seem to be prevalent in violent NRMs: dramatic denouements, strict rule of law and high commitment, supernaturalism, new religion or new teachings, isolationism, apocalyptic teachings, charismatic leadership, absolute leader authority, group fragility, and repression from the state or politics. These 10 attributes were used to grade four NRMs (Aum Shinrikyo, Branch Davidians, People's Temple, and Scientology), and the results were analyzed using Social Network Analysis (SNA) techniques. The results show that violent NRMs cluster together, meaning that they are more closely associated with certain attributes. The attribute scores for dramatic denouements, strict rule of law, apocalyptic teachings, and isolationism were substantially more associated with violent NRMs than with nonviolent NRMs.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Dec 01, 2012
- Accession Number
- ADA574673
Entities
People
- David M. Taylor
- Kristopher W. Struve
Organizations
- Naval Postgraduate School