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  1. Religious Discrimination in Childhood and Adolescence.Nastasya van der Straten Waillet Roskam & Isabelle - 2012 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 34 (2):215-242.
    The aim of this study was to assess the links between religious discrimination and developmental and contextual variables. Based on the assumption that discrimination results from the interplay of prejudice and moral thinking, discriminatory behaviour was hypothesised to be linked to age, school environment, minority or majority group membership, and parental religious socialisation practices. The results indicate that discrimination is more frequent during childhood than during pre-adolescence or adolescence, more common in homogeneous schools than in heterogeneous schools, and more likely (...)
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  • A Mimetic Theoretical Approach to Multiculturalism: Normalizing the Singaporean Exception.John Choo - 2019 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 26 (1):209-235.
    At the time of writing, the multicultural ideal, if there had ever been one, within North America and Western Europe appears to be in a state of unprecedented precariousness, given recent political developments. The term "multicultural" here, and in fact in the rest of this paper, refers not to a description of the prevailing state of affairs, but to a normative attitude, reflected in public policy, that seeks a relatively pluralist approach to "culture." Apparently confirming political pronouncements by then-UK Prime (...)
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  • Religious Discrimination in Childhood and Adolescence.Nastasya Waillet & Isabelle Roskam - 2012 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 34 (2):215-242.
    The aim of this study was to assess the links between religious discrimination and developmental and contextual variables. Based on the assumption that discrimination results from the interplay of prejudice and moral thinking, discriminatory behaviour was hypothesised to be linked to age, school environment, minority or majority group membership, and parental religious socialisation practices. The results indicate that discrimination is more frequent during childhood than during pre-adolescence or adolescence, more common in homogeneous schools than in heterogeneous schools, and more likely (...)
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