Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 17
pro vyhledávání: '"Ziasma Haneef Khan"'
Publikováno v:
Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. 14:503-511
Spirituality and religiosity related research in Muslim countries is still in its infancy. The paper aimed to translate, validate and test the applicability of the Urdu version of the spirituality and religious experiences scales among university stu
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::4ec1c84c46a105b995fff83d7d38b31b
Publikováno v:
The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. 28:271-280
Development of a Greater Jihad Scale sought to record “jihad” as a Muslim spiritual struggle. Pakistani madrassa and university students responded to items that described Self Jihad as a struggle a...
Religious reflection in Pakistan: further evidence of integration between Muslim faith and intellect
Publikováno v:
Journal of Beliefs & Values. 39:258-262
Religious groups outside the West have displayed a positive correlation between faith and intellect-oriented reflection in contrast to the negative relationship found with American Christians. This study extended the analysis to Pakistani Muslims. Un
Publikováno v:
Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 18:482-491
This study examined relationships of Muslim spirituality with positive psychology in Pakistan. In a sample of 200 university students and community members, the spirituality of Muslim Experiential Religiousness displayed direct linkages with Meaning
Publikováno v:
Archive for the Psychology of Religion. 37:37-53
This investigation examined Pakistani Muslim understandings of the animal sacrifice that occurs during Eid-ul-Adha at the end of the Hajj. Pakistani university students ( N = 156) responded to a number of items expressing possible interpretations of
Publikováno v:
Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 16:663-670
This study examined the possibility that smoking may interfere with Muslim commitments in general and with the experience and behaviour of Ramadan in particular. During Ramadan, a sample of 29 smoking and 46 non-smoking Pakistani men responded to mea
Publikováno v:
Journal of religion and health. 55(6)
Pakistani Muslim university students (N = 207) displayed Personal Distress, Public Distress, and Personal Defeat Reactions to Terrorism. All three reactions predicted poorer mental health with Personal Defeat being especially disturbed in its adjustm
Publikováno v:
Archive for the Psychology of Religion. 34:137-147
Research suggests that religious beliefs may both help and hinder how Muslims cope. In a Pakistani sample, the Positive Islamic Coping, Islamic Identity, and Extra-Prayer Commitment factors from the Psychological Measure of Islamic Religiousness corr
Publikováno v:
Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 15:435-446
Previous efforts to demonstrate the coping benefits of Muslim beliefs have yielded ambiguous outcomes. With a sample of 200 Pakistani adults, this project used the Islamic Positive Religious Coping and Identification (IPRCI) subscale within the Psych