RT Article T1 Ethnoreligious Conflict and Populism: Emotive Political Response in the Rohingya Conflict JF Religions VO 12 IS 10 A1 Laoutides, Costas LA English YR 2021 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1794923802 AB The rise of populism in the twenty-first century has been marked by the use of religion and national identity as emotive mobilizing forces to increase in-group solidarity and demarcate the notional boundaries of communities. The process often leads to the exclusion of vulnerable ethnoreligious minorities and to increased violence against them. This article analyses the role of fear as a principal emotion in the context of ethnoreligious conflict with reference to the Rohingya conflict in Myanmar. The article is divided in three parts. Part one explores notions of collective fear with reference to religious and ethnic conflict. Part two illustrates how collective existential fear has fuelled populist religious infused responses to the Rohignya conflict leading to the latest mass exodus of 2017. The final part considers whether fear can be an instrument of construction rather than destruction, to help build bridges than destroy, to connect people than isolate them. K1 Rakhine K1 Rohingya K1 Emotions K1 Ethnic conflict K1 Fear K1 Populism K1 Religious Conflict DO 10.3390/rel12100816