Thinking about Political Psychology
Herausgeber: Kuklinski, James H.
Thinking about Political Psychology
Herausgeber: Kuklinski, James H.
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A discussion and debate of the major issues facing the field of political psychology.
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A discussion and debate of the major issues facing the field of political psychology.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 597g
- ISBN-13: 9780521114424
- ISBN-10: 052111442X
- Artikelnr.: 26154230
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 597g
- ISBN-13: 9780521114424
- ISBN-10: 052111442X
- Artikelnr.: 26154230
Introduction James H. Kuklinski; Part I. Defining Political Psychology: 1.
The contours of political psychology: situating research on political
information processing John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph;
Part II. Theory and Research: 2. Who can persuade whom? Implications from
the nexus of psychology and rational choice theory Arthur Lupia; 3.
Expanding the envelope: citizenship, contextual methodologies, and
comparative political psychology Pamela Johnston Conover and Donald D.
Searing; 4. The challenges of political psychology: lessons to be learned
from research on attitude perception Jon A. Krosnick; Part III. The
Psychology-Political Nexus: 5. Political psychology and political science
John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph; 6. Is political
psychology sufficiently psychological? Distinguishing political psychology
from psychological political science Jon A. Krosnick; 7. Political
psychology, political behavior, and politics: questions of aggregation,
causal distance, and taste Robert C. Luskin; Part IV. Political Psychology
and Aggregate Opinion: 8. The micro foundations of mood James A. Stimson;
9. From denial to extenuation (and finally beyond): political
sophistication and citizen performance Robert C. Luskin; 10. Political
psychology and the micro-macro gap in politics.
The contours of political psychology: situating research on political
information processing John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph;
Part II. Theory and Research: 2. Who can persuade whom? Implications from
the nexus of psychology and rational choice theory Arthur Lupia; 3.
Expanding the envelope: citizenship, contextual methodologies, and
comparative political psychology Pamela Johnston Conover and Donald D.
Searing; 4. The challenges of political psychology: lessons to be learned
from research on attitude perception Jon A. Krosnick; Part III. The
Psychology-Political Nexus: 5. Political psychology and political science
John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph; 6. Is political
psychology sufficiently psychological? Distinguishing political psychology
from psychological political science Jon A. Krosnick; 7. Political
psychology, political behavior, and politics: questions of aggregation,
causal distance, and taste Robert C. Luskin; Part IV. Political Psychology
and Aggregate Opinion: 8. The micro foundations of mood James A. Stimson;
9. From denial to extenuation (and finally beyond): political
sophistication and citizen performance Robert C. Luskin; 10. Political
psychology and the micro-macro gap in politics.
Introduction James H. Kuklinski; Part I. Defining Political Psychology: 1.
The contours of political psychology: situating research on political
information processing John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph;
Part II. Theory and Research: 2. Who can persuade whom? Implications from
the nexus of psychology and rational choice theory Arthur Lupia; 3.
Expanding the envelope: citizenship, contextual methodologies, and
comparative political psychology Pamela Johnston Conover and Donald D.
Searing; 4. The challenges of political psychology: lessons to be learned
from research on attitude perception Jon A. Krosnick; Part III. The
Psychology-Political Nexus: 5. Political psychology and political science
John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph; 6. Is political
psychology sufficiently psychological? Distinguishing political psychology
from psychological political science Jon A. Krosnick; 7. Political
psychology, political behavior, and politics: questions of aggregation,
causal distance, and taste Robert C. Luskin; Part IV. Political Psychology
and Aggregate Opinion: 8. The micro foundations of mood James A. Stimson;
9. From denial to extenuation (and finally beyond): political
sophistication and citizen performance Robert C. Luskin; 10. Political
psychology and the micro-macro gap in politics.
The contours of political psychology: situating research on political
information processing John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph;
Part II. Theory and Research: 2. Who can persuade whom? Implications from
the nexus of psychology and rational choice theory Arthur Lupia; 3.
Expanding the envelope: citizenship, contextual methodologies, and
comparative political psychology Pamela Johnston Conover and Donald D.
Searing; 4. The challenges of political psychology: lessons to be learned
from research on attitude perception Jon A. Krosnick; Part III. The
Psychology-Political Nexus: 5. Political psychology and political science
John L. Sullivan, Wendy M. Rahn and Thomas Rudolph; 6. Is political
psychology sufficiently psychological? Distinguishing political psychology
from psychological political science Jon A. Krosnick; 7. Political
psychology, political behavior, and politics: questions of aggregation,
causal distance, and taste Robert C. Luskin; Part IV. Political Psychology
and Aggregate Opinion: 8. The micro foundations of mood James A. Stimson;
9. From denial to extenuation (and finally beyond): political
sophistication and citizen performance Robert C. Luskin; 10. Political
psychology and the micro-macro gap in politics.