Ali Mashuri

ORCID: 0000-0001-6543-8634
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About
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Research Areas
  • Social and Intergroup Psychology
  • Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and Political Violence
  • Cultural Differences and Values
  • Misinformation and Its Impacts
  • Religion, Spirituality, and Psychology
  • Islamic Studies and Radicalism
  • Hate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection
  • COVID-19 Prevention and Impact
  • Multimedia Learning Systems
  • Political Conflict and Governance
  • Educational Methods and Impacts
  • Education and Character Development
  • Asian Studies and History
  • Pancasila Values in Education
  • Asian Geopolitics and Ethnography
  • Psychology of Social Influence
  • Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
  • Behavioral Health and Interventions
  • Educational Methods and Media Use
  • Educational Curriculum and Learning Methods
  • Action Observation and Synchronization
  • Education, Sociology, Communication Studies
  • Child Development and Education
  • Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion
  • Legal and Policy Analysis in Indonesia

University of Brawijaya
2015-2024

ORCID
2023

Universitas Islam Negeri Maulana Malik Ibrahim
2022

Sultan Agung Islamic University
2020

Leiden University
2016-2018

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
2011-2016

UIN Sunan Ampel Surabaya
2013

Institut Agama Islam Negeri Manado
2012-2013

Universitas Pekalongan
2012-2013

Significance Cooperation is key to well-functioning groups and societies. Rather than addressing high-cost cooperation involving giving money or time effort, we examine social mindfulness—a form of interpersonal benevolence that requires basic perspective-taking aimed at leaving choice for others. Do societies differ in mindfulness, if so, does it matter? Here, find not only considerable variation across 31 nations regions but also an association between mindfulness countries’ performance on...

10.1073/pnas.2023846118 article EN cc-by-nc-nd Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2021-08-23

The present study tested how intergroup threat (high versus low) and social identity as a Muslim (salient non-salient) affected belief in conspiracy theories. Data among Indonesian students (N = 139) from this demonstrated that salience interacted to influence High triggered greater theories than low threat, more prominently the condition which participants’ was made salient. Collective angst also proved mediate effect of on belief. However, line with prediction, evidence mediation...

10.21500/20112084.642 article EN cc-by-nc-nd International journal of psychological research 2015-01-01

This current research was to give new insight into group-based variables that frame belief in conspiracy about terrorism Indonesia.Results (N = 201) showed social identification with Moslem positively related out-group derogation the Western people and these have conspired instigate Indonesia.We also demonstrated that, line prediction, effect of on theory held only when participants perceived as highly threatening Islamic identity.This intergroup threat structured mediation role...

10.5861/ijrsp.2013.446 article EN International Journal of Research Studies in Psychology 2013-10-28

Individual innovative behavior reflects the exploration and application of new ideas in work environment. Personality cultural orientation (individualism vs. collectivism) play an important role shaping employee's tendencies. Unfortunately, most current research still examines personality factors separately, even though both have great potential to be interrelated predicting individual behavior. Therefore, this study aims analyze influence on workplace. This uses a quantitative approach with...

10.7454/jps.2025.08 article EN Jurnal Psikologi Sosial 2025-02-24

This article addresses the question of why members a majority group, despite their more powerful status, may protest against low-power minority groups. The present study addressed this in context immanent intergroup relations between Muslims, as and non-Muslims, Indonesia. It is argued that at core such collective protests threat by association, perception group groups are league with West which threatens existence Muslims worldwide. Based on data collected using survey questionnaire from...

10.1177/09713336231152312 article EN Psychology and Developing Societies 2023-02-17

Indonesian Muslims believe in conspiracies, suggesting that the West is behind terrorist attacks Indonesia. This belief persists despite overwhelming evidence Islamist radicals were true perpetrators. The current research examines role intergroup threats and negative emotions have moulding this type of conspiratorial belief, how dependent upon level Muslims’ perceived identity subversion, is, a sense Western ways life fundamentally changed Islamic identity. Data from 246 Muslim students...

10.1177/0971333615622893 article EN Psychology and Developing Societies 2016-02-17

Victims of natural or humanitarian disasters sometimes resist aid offered to them, resulting in slower recovery among victims, and feelings rejection offerers. We present two studies conducted Indonesia that investigated motives for spurning offers aid. Both showed beliefs developed countries’ conspiracies lead participants see as guided by strategic rather than prosocial motives. Perceived turn enhanced resistance, whereas perceived decreased resistance. Conspiratorial resistance were...

10.1177/1368430220962179 article EN Group Processes & Intergroup Relations 2020-10-20

Despite its prevalence and widespread media coverage, separatism as a phenomenon is barely covered in psychological investigations, the majority's response to has been completely ignored. We present two studies which we investigated notion that separatist movements threaten continuation of national identity, well nation's economic position. Moreover, hypothesized found members majority group respond threat by supporting government measures help group. Javanese students who were induced...

10.1177/0146167213499613 article EN Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 2013-08-15

Islamic moderateness is said to be one of the key factors that contribute promotion peace in Muslim societies. We present an empirical study conducted Indonesia ( N = 299) assessed political and examined its role explaining Muslims’ tolerance towards non-Muslims, as well first group’s support for making reconciliation with latter group. found hypothesised was a positive predictor outgroup tolerance, because it had positively predicting sense national identity higher order vis-à-vis (i.e....

10.1177/0084672420931204 article EN Archive for the Psychology of Religion 2020-07-15

This research set out to examine the role of negative evaluations national ethics in escalating Islamic radicalism. To this end, we conducted three studies among samples Muslims Indonesia. In Study 1b involving 610 participants, tested an explorative way latent structure or number dimensions reflecting perceived immorality, illegitimacy, and inefficiency based on participants’ religious beliefs. We confirmed 2 ( N = 214), which also showed as expected how they augmented feelings in-group...

10.1177/21582440211041099 article EN cc-by SAGE Open 2021-07-01

An important part of our daily lives is characterized with helping interactions, which not only take place in interpersonal context but also intergroup context.Helping interactions typically occur people belonging to certain social category (ingroup) are willing help others different (outgroup).This research aims examine, firstly, how outgroup and empathy affected by status perspective-taking.Secondly, this test the role mediating effect perspective-taking on helping.The results line all...

10.5861/ijrsp.2012.149 article EN International Journal of Research Studies in Psychology 2012-05-29

This study examined how distrust towards an out-group believed to be actor of a conspiracy theory moderates the role Islamic identification, group incompatibility and competitive victimhood in explaining belief said conspiracy. The contextual background we used verify this idea is among Indonesian Muslims about involvement Western countries behind terrorism Indonesia. More precisely, found only Muslim participants with high people that identification positively predicted perception Muslims,...

10.1017/jtp.2014.11 article EN Journal of Tropical Psychology 2014-01-01

The current research was to investigate what psychological factors predict Muslims’ negative stereotypes of the West, and underlying mechanism by which can translate into aggressive tendencies towards West. A correlational survey among a sample Indonesian Muslims ( N = 360) demonstrated that more participants negatively stereotyped they thought should aggress latter group. We also found as expected West were positively predicted perceived conflict between Islam this intergroup in turn...

10.1177/0971333618819151 article EN Psychology and Developing Societies 2019-02-11

Emphasizing a common group identity is often suggested as way to promote between-group helping. But recently, researchers have identified set of strategic motives for helping other groups, including the desire present own warm and generous. When motive strategic, salient should reduce willingness help another group, because no longer communicates quality ingroup (only group). The authors tested this hypothesis in two experiments, which they assessed beliefs about (Study 1) actual through...

10.1177/1948550611417315 article EN Social Psychological and Personality Science 2011-08-01

The current research examined two fundamental motives that could lie at the root of separatist groups’ desire to be independent from nonseparatist majority: need maintain own subgroup identity and preserve power vis-à-vis majority. These were in studies through surveys among samples indigenous people West Papua ( N = 201 248), where movements are actively striving for secession Republic Indonesia. As expected, threat increased perceptions injustice both studies, whereas empowerment....

10.1177/0146167217733076 article EN Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 2017-10-04

Politics in the current era are replete with unreliable media stories which lack evidence, sometimes disparagingly dubbed "fake news". A survey on a sample of Muslims Indonesia (N = 518) this work found that participants' endorsement collective action support issues little to no empirical evidence (i.e., post-truth action) increased as function their belief fake news and prejudice against outgroup non-Muslims). Belief stemmed from generic specific conspiratorial thinking, whereas was...

10.1080/00224545.2021.1935678 article EN The Journal of Social Psychology 2021-08-02

<p xmlns="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1">In December 2019, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) accused Myanmar government genocide against Rohingya Muslims. Represented by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, authorities denied such accusations. To understand how a political leader can deny ingroup wrongdoings, we unpacked Kyi’s ICJ speech and analyzed her defensive rhetorical style through critical narrative analysis. We aimed to identify describe denial strategies Kyi used...

10.5964/jspp.7301 article EN cc-by Journal of Social and Political Psychology 2021-08-26

In the current study, we investigate factors that facilitate or otherwise obstruct reparations of a perpetrating group (i.e. Muslims) to victim Christians). The study ( N = 200) reveals among Muslim participants, role dual Abrahamic categorization in positively predicting reparation attitude towards Christians was mediated by first group's prosocial emotions empathy and collective guilt latter group. addition, relative prototypicality negatively predicted each two emotions. Empathy turn...

10.1111/ajsp.12163 article EN Asian Journal Of Social Psychology 2017-01-01

The current study aims to understand victim blaming of Ahmadiyya group by majority Sunni Islam in Indonesia. We included ingroup essentialisation, outgroup identity undermining and belief conspiracy theory as predictors blaming. Results a survey among 147 Muslims shows that the relationship between is stronger for individuals holding de-essentialisation compared those with essentialisation. Moreover, was found mediate effect interaction variable essentialisation on In addition, correlated...

10.1177/0971333614564741 article EN Psychology and Developing Societies 2015-03-01

We examined how the perception that separatist groups threaten majority’s moral identity impacts latter group’s support for reconciliation in conflict. Two studies were conducted Indonesia, where conflict is rife. Javanese students (representing nonseparatist majority) responded surveys regarding conflicts Aceh (Study 1, N = 679) or West Papua 2, 500). As expected, perceived threat to increased this particular reconciliatory attitudes 1), emotions, and behaviours 2), through compensatory...

10.1177/1368430216677302 article EN Group Processes & Intergroup Relations 2016-11-25

The current study investigates the role of individual and intergroup factors in predicting Muslims’ tendency to attribute domestic terrorism Indonesia an external cause (i.e., West) or internal radical Islamist groups). results (N = 308) showed that symbolic threat realistic directly increased attribution conversely decreased attribution. Within context research, refers perception norms values West undermine Islamic identity. Realistic denotes economy technology power. factor fundamentalism,...

10.5964/ejop.v12i1.1001 article EN cc-by Europe’s Journal of Psychology 2016-02-29

The present study examined the role of Indonesian Moslem majority’s national identification, collective emotions pride and guilt in predicting their support helping members Islamic minority perceived inclusion towards this group. Data from (<italic>N</italic>= 182) demonstrated that, line with our prediction, for significantly predicted inclusion. We also hypothesized found that directly helping. Finally, identification had significant direct effects on both guilt. These findings shed light...

10.5964/ejop.v10i2.707 article EN cc-by Europe’s Journal of Psychology 2014-05-27

This study intended to investigate the effect of perspective-taking on outgroup helping, with warmth impression and status serving as moderating variables.Data from this (n = 201) provided full support for all hypotheses specified.Warmth impression, perspective-taking, turned out have significant main effects helping.Two-way interaction between (perspective-taking x impression) well status) helping were also significant.Finally, predicted, was significantly affected by a three-way...

10.5861/ijrsp.2012.238 article EN International Journal of Research Studies in Psychology 2012-12-30

We examined how immigrants' acculturation style (multiculturalism versus assimilation) affects the host society's willingness to help immigrants. The results from this experiment supported our expectations in showing that multiculturalism triggered less immigrant helping than assimilation, but only among high national identifiers. In addition, immigrants pursuing were perceived as warm those and warmth mediated interaction effect of identification on helping. Whereas could improve...

10.1111/ajsp.12009 article EN Asian Journal Of Social Psychology 2012-12-07

The current investigations examine how globalization signifying either identity threat or realistic has a differential role in mediating the effect of competitive victim-hood on Muslims’ religious fundamentalism. Study 1 ( N = 119) revealed that and not significantly mediated victimhood 2 155) successfully replicated finding 1. Moreover, also such was stronger among participants perceiving Muslims as having high than low group entitativity, which refers to extent are considered be one,...

10.1163/15736121-12341304 article EN Archive for the Psychology of Religion 2015-06-01
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