Litcius/Paper detail

Ritual, fusion, and conflict: The roots of agro-pastoral violence in rural Cameroon

Michael D. Buhrmester, David Zeitlyn, Harvey Whitehouse

2020Group Processes & Intergroup Relations32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Herder–farmer conflicts in West Africa have caused thousands of deaths in recent years. Many conflicts are triggered by localized events that rapidly spiral out of control. What leads specific interpersonal conflicts to scale up into intergroup violence? We propose that such conflicts are rooted in identity and ritual dynamics. We present evidence that participants in Mambila traditions of masquerade initiation in Cameroon report especially strong identity fusion, a visceral sense of oneness with the ingroup. Results showed that men strongly fused to their ethnic ingroup were especially willing to fight and die for it. Overall, our findings provide evidence that when ordinary conflicts develop between groups that differ sharply on ethnic and religious lines, there is grave risk that fused persons will escalate violence. Understanding these processes may inform future development of new strategies to prevent or ameliorate intergroup conflicts of this kind.

Topics & Concepts

Ethnic groupSocial psychologyGroup conflictPsychologyIdentity (music)Ingroups and outgroupsInterpersonal communicationInterpersonal violenceCriminologyGender studiesSociologyPoison controlSuicide preventionAnthropologyMedicineEnvironmental healthAcousticsPhysicsRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyAnthropological Studies and InsightsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation