conspiracy theory

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conspiracy theory

an element within a belief system in which social consequences, identified as harmful or unwanted, are seen as arising from the activities of groups believed able to influence the operation of power, economic decision-making, etc., in surreptitious ways. Members of successful religious or ethnic minority groups, political extremists, freemasons, etc., may be identified in such theories, e.g. the ‘witch hunt’ of members of the Communist Party (and alleged fellow travellers) carried out by Joseph McCarthy in the United States in the early 1950s, or the so-called ‘Doctors’ Plot’ in the USSR prior to Stalin's death in 1953, in which Jewish doctors were accused of plotting to poison Stalin. Whether or not there are elements of truth in the claims made in such conspiracy theories, it is the exaggerated nature of the claims, and the often slender evidence advanced, that leads conspiracy theories to be regarded as a phenomenon requiring explanation rather than being seen as ‘true’ theories. Thus, they might be explained as arising from the believers’ powerlessness and structurally precarious situation, and the need for the believers themselves to find a reason’ for this and some hope of resolution.
Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2000
References in periodicals archive ?
Conspiracy beliefs included that the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) may have been created in a laboratory, and that the pharmaceutical industry invented AIDS to sell more toxic drugs.
The conspiracy beliefs outlined above cannot be dismissed as a mere fringe phenomenon.
In light of the above, it is perhaps unsurprising that an openness to stealth Jihad and Birther conspiracy beliefs is now commonplace on the FOX network's various news and talk show programs.
A Scripps Howard poll conducted in 2006 appears fairly typical in terms of its findings concerning the approximate number of Americans who accept either the "let it happen on purpose" or "made it happen on purpose" versions of Truther conspiracy beliefs. According to the poll, 36% of Americans said it was "somewhat likely" or "very likely" that U.S.
3) Do perceived barriers, weak attitudes about condom use, high endorsement in HIV conspiracy beliefs, and racial-identity salience decrease Black women's odds of having had an HIV test?
The HIV conspiracy beliefs scale was replicated from a study by Bogart and Thorburn (2005).
HIV conspiracy beliefs were also statistically significant.
For men--with sociodemographic variables, partner characteristics, sexually transmitted disease history, perception of risk, and psychological factors controlled for--stronger conspiracy beliefs were significantly associated with more negative condom attitudes and inconsistent condom usage (Bogart & Thornburn, 2005).
Collectively, the earlier-mentioned studies have begun to document associations between conspiracy beliefs and low condom usage among male African Americans.
Half of the study participants subscribed in some degree to conspiracy beliefs or had a general mistrust of the dominant social order related to reported HIV statistics.
After random phone interviews of 348 people, Goertzel proposed that a person's convictions about secret plots serves as evidence for other conspiracy beliefs.
Thus, media depiction of assassinations, UFO sightings, or human abductions by aliens can prompt or strengthen cover-up and other conspiracy beliefs. Oliver Stone's movie JFK which fosters New Orleans Prosecutor Jim Garrison's largely discredited conspiracy theories may keep the issue alive for another generation, an expectation that is borne out by Butler et al.'s (1995) finding that in comparison to adult theater-goers who were waiting to see the film, those who had just seen it were angrier and more firmly convinced that multiple agencies were involved in both the assassination and its cover-up.