Beyond Prejudice
Herausgeber: Dixon, John
Beyond Prejudice
Herausgeber: Dixon, John
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This edited collection of essays re-evaluates the concept of prejudice and attempts to move beyond conventional approaches to the subject.
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This edited collection of essays re-evaluates the concept of prejudice and attempts to move beyond conventional approaches to the subject.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 346
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Januar 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 652g
- ISBN-13: 9780521198165
- ISBN-10: 052119816X
- Artikelnr.: 33765823
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 346
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Januar 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 652g
- ISBN-13: 9780521198165
- ISBN-10: 052119816X
- Artikelnr.: 33765823
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction John Dixon and Mark Levine; Part I. Beyond Prejudice: 1. From
perception to mobilization: the shifting paradigm of prejudice Stephen
Reicher; 2. Prejudice, social identity and social change: resolving the
Allportian problematic Katherine J. Reynolds, S. Alexander Haslam and John
C. Turner; 3. An ambivalent alliance: hostile and benevolent sexism as
complementary justifications for gender inequality Peter Glick and Susan T.
Fiske; 4. Prejudice and dehumanization Nick Haslam and Stephen Loughnan; 5.
Stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination revisited: from William James to
W. E. B. Du Bois Stanley O. Gaines, Jr; 6. Beyond 'old' and 'new': for a
social psychology of racism Samuel Pehrson and Colin Wayne Leach; 7. The
notion of 'prejudice': some rhetorical and ideological aspects Michael
Billig; 8. The prejudice problematic Margaret Wetherell; 9. Implicit
prejudice in mind and interaction Kevin Durrheim; 10. Rethinking the
prejudice problematic: a collaborative cognition approach Susan Condor and
Lia Figgou; Part II. Prejudice and Social Change Revisited: 11. Models of
social change in social psychology: collective action or prejudice
reduction? Conflict or harmony? Stephen C. Wright and Gamze Baray; 12. From
attitudes to (in)action: the darker side of 'we' John F. Dovidio, Tamar
Saguy, Samuel L. Gaertner and Erin L. Thomas; 13. Contact and social change
in an ongoing asymmetrical conflict: four social-psychological models of
reconciliation-aimed planned encounters between Israeli Jews and
Palestinians Ifat Maoz; 14. From prejudice to collective action Clifford
Stott, John Drury and Stephen Reicher; Conclusions and future directions:
the nature, significance and inherent limitations of the concept of
prejudice in social psychology John Dixon and Mark Levine.
perception to mobilization: the shifting paradigm of prejudice Stephen
Reicher; 2. Prejudice, social identity and social change: resolving the
Allportian problematic Katherine J. Reynolds, S. Alexander Haslam and John
C. Turner; 3. An ambivalent alliance: hostile and benevolent sexism as
complementary justifications for gender inequality Peter Glick and Susan T.
Fiske; 4. Prejudice and dehumanization Nick Haslam and Stephen Loughnan; 5.
Stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination revisited: from William James to
W. E. B. Du Bois Stanley O. Gaines, Jr; 6. Beyond 'old' and 'new': for a
social psychology of racism Samuel Pehrson and Colin Wayne Leach; 7. The
notion of 'prejudice': some rhetorical and ideological aspects Michael
Billig; 8. The prejudice problematic Margaret Wetherell; 9. Implicit
prejudice in mind and interaction Kevin Durrheim; 10. Rethinking the
prejudice problematic: a collaborative cognition approach Susan Condor and
Lia Figgou; Part II. Prejudice and Social Change Revisited: 11. Models of
social change in social psychology: collective action or prejudice
reduction? Conflict or harmony? Stephen C. Wright and Gamze Baray; 12. From
attitudes to (in)action: the darker side of 'we' John F. Dovidio, Tamar
Saguy, Samuel L. Gaertner and Erin L. Thomas; 13. Contact and social change
in an ongoing asymmetrical conflict: four social-psychological models of
reconciliation-aimed planned encounters between Israeli Jews and
Palestinians Ifat Maoz; 14. From prejudice to collective action Clifford
Stott, John Drury and Stephen Reicher; Conclusions and future directions:
the nature, significance and inherent limitations of the concept of
prejudice in social psychology John Dixon and Mark Levine.
Introduction John Dixon and Mark Levine; Part I. Beyond Prejudice: 1. From
perception to mobilization: the shifting paradigm of prejudice Stephen
Reicher; 2. Prejudice, social identity and social change: resolving the
Allportian problematic Katherine J. Reynolds, S. Alexander Haslam and John
C. Turner; 3. An ambivalent alliance: hostile and benevolent sexism as
complementary justifications for gender inequality Peter Glick and Susan T.
Fiske; 4. Prejudice and dehumanization Nick Haslam and Stephen Loughnan; 5.
Stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination revisited: from William James to
W. E. B. Du Bois Stanley O. Gaines, Jr; 6. Beyond 'old' and 'new': for a
social psychology of racism Samuel Pehrson and Colin Wayne Leach; 7. The
notion of 'prejudice': some rhetorical and ideological aspects Michael
Billig; 8. The prejudice problematic Margaret Wetherell; 9. Implicit
prejudice in mind and interaction Kevin Durrheim; 10. Rethinking the
prejudice problematic: a collaborative cognition approach Susan Condor and
Lia Figgou; Part II. Prejudice and Social Change Revisited: 11. Models of
social change in social psychology: collective action or prejudice
reduction? Conflict or harmony? Stephen C. Wright and Gamze Baray; 12. From
attitudes to (in)action: the darker side of 'we' John F. Dovidio, Tamar
Saguy, Samuel L. Gaertner and Erin L. Thomas; 13. Contact and social change
in an ongoing asymmetrical conflict: four social-psychological models of
reconciliation-aimed planned encounters between Israeli Jews and
Palestinians Ifat Maoz; 14. From prejudice to collective action Clifford
Stott, John Drury and Stephen Reicher; Conclusions and future directions:
the nature, significance and inherent limitations of the concept of
prejudice in social psychology John Dixon and Mark Levine.
perception to mobilization: the shifting paradigm of prejudice Stephen
Reicher; 2. Prejudice, social identity and social change: resolving the
Allportian problematic Katherine J. Reynolds, S. Alexander Haslam and John
C. Turner; 3. An ambivalent alliance: hostile and benevolent sexism as
complementary justifications for gender inequality Peter Glick and Susan T.
Fiske; 4. Prejudice and dehumanization Nick Haslam and Stephen Loughnan; 5.
Stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination revisited: from William James to
W. E. B. Du Bois Stanley O. Gaines, Jr; 6. Beyond 'old' and 'new': for a
social psychology of racism Samuel Pehrson and Colin Wayne Leach; 7. The
notion of 'prejudice': some rhetorical and ideological aspects Michael
Billig; 8. The prejudice problematic Margaret Wetherell; 9. Implicit
prejudice in mind and interaction Kevin Durrheim; 10. Rethinking the
prejudice problematic: a collaborative cognition approach Susan Condor and
Lia Figgou; Part II. Prejudice and Social Change Revisited: 11. Models of
social change in social psychology: collective action or prejudice
reduction? Conflict or harmony? Stephen C. Wright and Gamze Baray; 12. From
attitudes to (in)action: the darker side of 'we' John F. Dovidio, Tamar
Saguy, Samuel L. Gaertner and Erin L. Thomas; 13. Contact and social change
in an ongoing asymmetrical conflict: four social-psychological models of
reconciliation-aimed planned encounters between Israeli Jews and
Palestinians Ifat Maoz; 14. From prejudice to collective action Clifford
Stott, John Drury and Stephen Reicher; Conclusions and future directions:
the nature, significance and inherent limitations of the concept of
prejudice in social psychology John Dixon and Mark Levine.