The Psychology of Resolving Global Conflicts: Group and social factorsMari Fitzduff, Chris E. Stout These volumes present issues of war, conflict resolution, and stable peace. They explain how men and women are transformed into perpetrators of genocide, how neighbors become sworn enemies, the cultural and psychological origins of war, and even the neuropsychology of conflict. An exploration of what a successful war means for stakeholders holds profound implications for what a victory in the war against terrorism would look like. |
Contents
The Cultural and Psychological Origins of War with Notes on | 1 |
The Cultural Constructions of Conflict and Peace | 21 |
Instigation Propagation and Resolution | 37 |
Copyright | |
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adolescents approach Arab attitudes authoritarian personality behavior Brewer Cairns chap cognitive concept conflict resolution contact hypothesis context cooperation Crimean Tatars cultural economic effects encounter enemy ethnic ethnocentrism evaluation factors feelings flict Gaertner genocide goals group members Hewstone high context cultures hostility human in-group in-group bias increase individual interac interactive problem solving intergroup bias intergroup conflict intergroup contact intergroup relations International interventions intrastate conflict issues Journal of Personality Journal of Social Kelman killing leaders Low context cultures Maoz mediating minority mutual national identity needs negative negotiations Northern Ireland out-group members Palestinian participants parties perceived perceptions Personality and Social perspective Pettigrew political violence positive post-traumatic stress disorder prejudice problem-solving workshops programs PTSD relationship role salience social identity Social Psychology society status Staub Stephan stereotypes strategies stress suggests symptoms Tajfel theory tion trauma understanding University Press veterans York youth