• Title of article

    Sacred values and conflict over Iran’s nuclear program

  • Author/Authors

    Morteza Dehghani، نويسنده , , Scott Atran، نويسنده , , Rumen Iliev، نويسنده , , Sonya Sachdeva، نويسنده , , Douglas Medin، نويسنده , , Jeremy Ginges، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    540
  • To page
    546
  • Abstract
    Conflict over Iran’s nuclear program, which involves a US-led policy to impose sanctions on Iran, is perceived by each side as a preeminent challenge to its own national security and global peace. Yet, there is little scientific study or understanding of how material incentives and disincentives, such as economic sanctions, psychologically affect the targeted population and potentially influence behaviour. Here we explore the Iranian nuclear program within a paradigm concerned with sacred values. We integrate experiments within a survey of 1997 Iranians. We find that a relatively small but politically significant portion of the Iranian population believes that acquiring nuclear energy has become a sacred value, in the sense that proposed economic incentives and disincentives result in a “backfire effect” in which offers of material rewards or punishment lead to increased anger and greater disapproval. This pattern was specific to nuclear energy and did not hold for acquiring nuclear weapons. The present study is the first demonstration of the backfire effect for material disincentives as well as incentives, and on an issue whose apparent sacred nature is recent rather than longstanding.
  • Keywords
    Sanctions , conflict resolution , protected values , sacred values , Iran , nuclear program
  • Journal title
    Judgment and Decision Making
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Judgment and Decision Making
  • Record number

    657459