1. Diverse Sociopolitical Reactions to the 9/11 Attack and Associations with Religious Coping.
- Author
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Ai, Amy L., Evans-Campbell, Teresa, Aisenberg, Gino, and Cascio, Toni
- Subjects
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SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 , *TERRORISM , *SUBVERSIVE activities , *SOCIETAL reaction , *POLITICAL participation , *RELIGION & sociology , *SOCIAL problems - Abstract
The September 11, 2001 (9/11) attacks in New York City and Washington, DC brought a historical terror to the United States. The aftermath of 9/11 will be felt for decades in the way Americans view the world and the national political sphere. Yet, it is unclear in what direction 9/11 impacted American sociopolitical reactions and how their styles of spiritual or religious coping in their general life might influence such reactions. On the basis of the literature on terrorism, we developed a scale of sociopolitical reactions to the 9/11 attacks using a student sample at three American universities. The results indicate that responses to 9/11 are diverse and patterns of sociopolitical reactions are associated with gender, years of education, religiousness, peritraumatic emotional response, being a veteran, being close to a 9/11 victim, concerns about future attacks, and two types of religious/spiritual coping. Our study calls for more research that investigates sociopolitical reactions and the role of faith matters in an era of international terrorism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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