With insightful chapters from key social psychologists and peace scholars, this handbook offers an integrative and extensive overview of critical questions, issues, processes, and strategies relevant to understanding and addressing intergroup conflict.
New ways of managing conflict are important features of work & employment in organizations.
The authors focus on the multidimensionality of gender in conflict, yet they also prioritise the experience of women given both the changing nature of war and the historical de-emphasis on women's experiences.
Individuals, groups, and societies all experience and resolve conflict. In this handbook, scholars from multiple disciplines offer perspectives on the current state and future challenges in negotiation and conflict resolution.
This Handbook brings together contributions from leading scholars who take an economic perspective to study peace and conflict. Some chapters are largely empirical, exploring the correlates and quantifying the costs of conflict.
As a final example, citizens may experience collective guilt for the harmful actions of group members (past or ... Political psychologists should also take note of recent work in political sociology that documents the critical role of ...
Written by a team of distinguished and internationally renowned experts, this Oxford Handbook gives an analytical overview of international law as it applies in armed conflicts.
Remembering intergroup conflict. In L. Tropp (Ed.), The Oxford handbook of intergroup conflict (pp. 123–135). New York: Oxford University Press. Brewer, M. B. (1988). A dual process model of impression formation.
United in their belief in the possibility of liberation from oppression, with this Handbook, Hammack and his contributors offer a stirring blueprint for a new, important kind of social psychology today.
Expose, Oppose, Propose: Alternative Policy Groups and the Struggle for Global Justice. New York: Zed. ... Subaltern Movements in India: Gendered Geographies of Struggle against Neoliberal Development. New York: Routledge.
All three skulls have cut marks indicative of defleshing (Clark et al., 2003). Two of the skulls also show evidence of scraping or polishing, indicative of extensive handling or carrying (possibly in a natural fabric bag).