The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology
Herausgeber: Osborne, Danny; Sibley, Chris G.
The Cambridge Handbook of Political Psychology
Herausgeber: Osborne, Danny; Sibley, Chris G.
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This handbook reviews the psychology of political behaviour from an international perspective, covering foundational approaches and contemporary challenges. Scholars, students and practitioners will find up-to-date literature reviews and research insights from leading scholars into how people think, feel and act in different political contexts.
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This handbook reviews the psychology of political behaviour from an international perspective, covering foundational approaches and contemporary challenges. Scholars, students and practitioners will find up-to-date literature reviews and research insights from leading scholars into how people think, feel and act in different political contexts.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 706
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Januar 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1170g
- ISBN-13: 9781108747417
- ISBN-10: 1108747418
- Artikelnr.: 62303500
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 706
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Januar 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1170g
- ISBN-13: 9781108747417
- ISBN-10: 1108747418
- Artikelnr.: 62303500
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Content; Part I. Foundations of Political Psychology: 1. Political
psychology: advancing an international perspective on the psychology of
political behaviour; 2. The evolutionary basis of political ideology; 3.
Genetic contributions to political phenomena; 4. The psychology and
neuroscience of partisanship; 5. The personality basis of political
preferences; 6. The structure, prevalence, and nature of mass belief
systems; 7. The psychology of public opinion; 8. Rational choice and
information processing; 9. Emotions and politics; 10. The developmental
science of politics: insights from the 2016 US Presidential Election; Part
II. The Politics of Intergroup Attitudes: 11. Authoritarianism:
conceptualization, research, and new developments; 12. A political
psychology of ethnocentrism; 13. Collective narcissism: how being
narcissistic about your groups shapes politics, group processes and
intergroup relations; 14. Demographic change, White decline, and the
changing nature of racial politics in election campaigns; 15.
Macro-diversity and intergroup attitudes; 16. The persistence of gender in
campaigns and elections; 17. The politics of abortion, pregnancy, and
motherhood; 18. Religiosity and openness to authoritarian governance; 19.
The consequences of moral conviction in politics: more negative than
positive? ; 20. The political psychology of national identity; 21. The
political dynamics of immigration opinion worldwide; 22. International and
individual differences in support for human rights; Part III. Contemporary
Challenges to Democracy: 23. The political psychology of inequality: why
rising rates of economic inequality affect our health and democracy; 24.
How social class influences political choices; 25. Fear and loathing in
American politics: a review of affective polarization; 26. Political
extremism; 27. The politics of hate: derogatory language in politics and
intergroup relations; 28. Populism; 29. A cultural theory of
autocracy-vs-democracy: on the psychological foundations of political
regimes; 30. Psychological theories meet the challenge of persuading and
mobilizing voters; 31. Collective action for social change: individual,
group and contextual factors shaping collective action and its outcomes;
32. Opinion formation and polarization in the news feed era: effects from
digital, social, and mobile media; 33. Conspiracy theory belief and
conspiratorial thinking; 34. Political psychology and the climate crisis;
35. The political psychology of cyber-terrorism; 36. Reconciliation in the
aftermath of collective violence; Part IV. Diversifying Perspectives in
Political Psychology: 37. Political psychology in the Global South:
collective memory, intergroup relations, ideology, and political
participation; 38. Political psychology in the Arab region: a commentary on
navigating research in unstable contexts; 39. Critical perspectives in
political psychology; 40. Rethinking group dynamics: the Cuban missile
crisis revisited; 41. Two sides of the same coin: a new look at differences
and similarities across political ideology; Index.
psychology: advancing an international perspective on the psychology of
political behaviour; 2. The evolutionary basis of political ideology; 3.
Genetic contributions to political phenomena; 4. The psychology and
neuroscience of partisanship; 5. The personality basis of political
preferences; 6. The structure, prevalence, and nature of mass belief
systems; 7. The psychology of public opinion; 8. Rational choice and
information processing; 9. Emotions and politics; 10. The developmental
science of politics: insights from the 2016 US Presidential Election; Part
II. The Politics of Intergroup Attitudes: 11. Authoritarianism:
conceptualization, research, and new developments; 12. A political
psychology of ethnocentrism; 13. Collective narcissism: how being
narcissistic about your groups shapes politics, group processes and
intergroup relations; 14. Demographic change, White decline, and the
changing nature of racial politics in election campaigns; 15.
Macro-diversity and intergroup attitudes; 16. The persistence of gender in
campaigns and elections; 17. The politics of abortion, pregnancy, and
motherhood; 18. Religiosity and openness to authoritarian governance; 19.
The consequences of moral conviction in politics: more negative than
positive? ; 20. The political psychology of national identity; 21. The
political dynamics of immigration opinion worldwide; 22. International and
individual differences in support for human rights; Part III. Contemporary
Challenges to Democracy: 23. The political psychology of inequality: why
rising rates of economic inequality affect our health and democracy; 24.
How social class influences political choices; 25. Fear and loathing in
American politics: a review of affective polarization; 26. Political
extremism; 27. The politics of hate: derogatory language in politics and
intergroup relations; 28. Populism; 29. A cultural theory of
autocracy-vs-democracy: on the psychological foundations of political
regimes; 30. Psychological theories meet the challenge of persuading and
mobilizing voters; 31. Collective action for social change: individual,
group and contextual factors shaping collective action and its outcomes;
32. Opinion formation and polarization in the news feed era: effects from
digital, social, and mobile media; 33. Conspiracy theory belief and
conspiratorial thinking; 34. Political psychology and the climate crisis;
35. The political psychology of cyber-terrorism; 36. Reconciliation in the
aftermath of collective violence; Part IV. Diversifying Perspectives in
Political Psychology: 37. Political psychology in the Global South:
collective memory, intergroup relations, ideology, and political
participation; 38. Political psychology in the Arab region: a commentary on
navigating research in unstable contexts; 39. Critical perspectives in
political psychology; 40. Rethinking group dynamics: the Cuban missile
crisis revisited; 41. Two sides of the same coin: a new look at differences
and similarities across political ideology; Index.
Content; Part I. Foundations of Political Psychology: 1. Political
psychology: advancing an international perspective on the psychology of
political behaviour; 2. The evolutionary basis of political ideology; 3.
Genetic contributions to political phenomena; 4. The psychology and
neuroscience of partisanship; 5. The personality basis of political
preferences; 6. The structure, prevalence, and nature of mass belief
systems; 7. The psychology of public opinion; 8. Rational choice and
information processing; 9. Emotions and politics; 10. The developmental
science of politics: insights from the 2016 US Presidential Election; Part
II. The Politics of Intergroup Attitudes: 11. Authoritarianism:
conceptualization, research, and new developments; 12. A political
psychology of ethnocentrism; 13. Collective narcissism: how being
narcissistic about your groups shapes politics, group processes and
intergroup relations; 14. Demographic change, White decline, and the
changing nature of racial politics in election campaigns; 15.
Macro-diversity and intergroup attitudes; 16. The persistence of gender in
campaigns and elections; 17. The politics of abortion, pregnancy, and
motherhood; 18. Religiosity and openness to authoritarian governance; 19.
The consequences of moral conviction in politics: more negative than
positive? ; 20. The political psychology of national identity; 21. The
political dynamics of immigration opinion worldwide; 22. International and
individual differences in support for human rights; Part III. Contemporary
Challenges to Democracy: 23. The political psychology of inequality: why
rising rates of economic inequality affect our health and democracy; 24.
How social class influences political choices; 25. Fear and loathing in
American politics: a review of affective polarization; 26. Political
extremism; 27. The politics of hate: derogatory language in politics and
intergroup relations; 28. Populism; 29. A cultural theory of
autocracy-vs-democracy: on the psychological foundations of political
regimes; 30. Psychological theories meet the challenge of persuading and
mobilizing voters; 31. Collective action for social change: individual,
group and contextual factors shaping collective action and its outcomes;
32. Opinion formation and polarization in the news feed era: effects from
digital, social, and mobile media; 33. Conspiracy theory belief and
conspiratorial thinking; 34. Political psychology and the climate crisis;
35. The political psychology of cyber-terrorism; 36. Reconciliation in the
aftermath of collective violence; Part IV. Diversifying Perspectives in
Political Psychology: 37. Political psychology in the Global South:
collective memory, intergroup relations, ideology, and political
participation; 38. Political psychology in the Arab region: a commentary on
navigating research in unstable contexts; 39. Critical perspectives in
political psychology; 40. Rethinking group dynamics: the Cuban missile
crisis revisited; 41. Two sides of the same coin: a new look at differences
and similarities across political ideology; Index.
psychology: advancing an international perspective on the psychology of
political behaviour; 2. The evolutionary basis of political ideology; 3.
Genetic contributions to political phenomena; 4. The psychology and
neuroscience of partisanship; 5. The personality basis of political
preferences; 6. The structure, prevalence, and nature of mass belief
systems; 7. The psychology of public opinion; 8. Rational choice and
information processing; 9. Emotions and politics; 10. The developmental
science of politics: insights from the 2016 US Presidential Election; Part
II. The Politics of Intergroup Attitudes: 11. Authoritarianism:
conceptualization, research, and new developments; 12. A political
psychology of ethnocentrism; 13. Collective narcissism: how being
narcissistic about your groups shapes politics, group processes and
intergroup relations; 14. Demographic change, White decline, and the
changing nature of racial politics in election campaigns; 15.
Macro-diversity and intergroup attitudes; 16. The persistence of gender in
campaigns and elections; 17. The politics of abortion, pregnancy, and
motherhood; 18. Religiosity and openness to authoritarian governance; 19.
The consequences of moral conviction in politics: more negative than
positive? ; 20. The political psychology of national identity; 21. The
political dynamics of immigration opinion worldwide; 22. International and
individual differences in support for human rights; Part III. Contemporary
Challenges to Democracy: 23. The political psychology of inequality: why
rising rates of economic inequality affect our health and democracy; 24.
How social class influences political choices; 25. Fear and loathing in
American politics: a review of affective polarization; 26. Political
extremism; 27. The politics of hate: derogatory language in politics and
intergroup relations; 28. Populism; 29. A cultural theory of
autocracy-vs-democracy: on the psychological foundations of political
regimes; 30. Psychological theories meet the challenge of persuading and
mobilizing voters; 31. Collective action for social change: individual,
group and contextual factors shaping collective action and its outcomes;
32. Opinion formation and polarization in the news feed era: effects from
digital, social, and mobile media; 33. Conspiracy theory belief and
conspiratorial thinking; 34. Political psychology and the climate crisis;
35. The political psychology of cyber-terrorism; 36. Reconciliation in the
aftermath of collective violence; Part IV. Diversifying Perspectives in
Political Psychology: 37. Political psychology in the Global South:
collective memory, intergroup relations, ideology, and political
participation; 38. Political psychology in the Arab region: a commentary on
navigating research in unstable contexts; 39. Critical perspectives in
political psychology; 40. Rethinking group dynamics: the Cuban missile
crisis revisited; 41. Two sides of the same coin: a new look at differences
and similarities across political ideology; Index.