Amanah and Muslim Identity: Relationships with Religious and Psychological Adjustment in Malaysia
Autor: | Mustafa Tekke, Zhuo Job Chen, Paul J. Watson, Saim Kayadibi |
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Přispěvatelé: | [Belirlenecek] |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Religion and Psychology
medicine.medical_specialty Identity (social science) 050109 social psychology Emotional Adjustment Islam Validity Time 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Identity Orientation Adaptation Psychological medicine Humans 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Amanah 030212 general & internal medicine General Nursing Social Identification Public health 05 social sciences Religious studies Malaysia General Medicine Mental health Self Concept Religious orientations Muslim personality adjustment Mental Health Scale (social sciences) Accountability Anxiety medicine.symptom Empathy Psychology Social psychology Psychosocial |
Popis: | Watson, Paul/0000-0001-9116-5174; Tekke, Mustafa/0000-0003-0412-4353 WOS: 000522841400019 PubMed: 30120689 Amanah refers to the accountability of Muslims to their community. In Malaysian Muslim university students (N = 209), an Amanah Scale predicted a stronger sense of identity along with more adaptive religious and psychosocial functioning. Multiple regression analyses identified Accountability to Society as especially influential, but Accountability to Allah exhibited at least some problematic implications. Amanah mediated Identity linkages with some measures of religious and psychological adjustment, but also suppressed Identity relationships with greater self-knowledge and lower anxiety. These data confirmed the importance of communal commitments in Muslim mental health, suggested that accountability may have limited liabilities as well as more obvious psychosocial advantages, and identified possible complexities in the assessment of Accountability to Allah. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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