Who's Afraid of Democracy? Vlad Glaveanu, Brady Wagoner, and Ignacio Bresco.
Part I. Niels Bohr Lecture.
Chapter 1. The Road to Actualized Democracy: A Psychological Exploration; Fathali M. Moghaddam.
Part II. Transitions To And From Democracy.
Chapter 2. Building Group Norms and Group Identities Into the Study of Transitions From Democracy to Dictatorship and Back Again; Winnifred R. Louis, Gi K. Chonu, Tulsi Achia, Cassandra M. Chapman, and Joshua Rhee.
Chapter 3. Looking for Happiness, Finding Economic Growth: The Chilean Transition to Democracy; David Carre.
Chapter 4. Democratic Revolutions? Insights on Social Stability and Social Change From Psychology and Politics; Lucas B. Mazur and Siri Neset.
Chapter 5. On Social Memory, Paradoxes of Opinion, and the Democratic Competence of Citizens; Cristian Tileaga.
Part III. Conflict In Democracy.
Chapter 6. Alternating Dominance: Social Categorization, Group Formation, and the Problem of Borders; Gordon Sammut.
Chapter 7. Actual Democracy and a United Europe of States: A Case Study of Austerity and Protest in the Republic of Ireland; Seamus A. Power.
Chapter 8. Ideology and Actualized Democracy: Allies or Enemies? Sandra Obradovic.
Chapter 9. Cultural Psychology and Politics: Otherness, Democracy, and the Refugee Crisis; Constance de Saint Laurent and Vlad Glaveanu.
Part IV. The Democratic Citizen.
Chapter 10. The Perfect Psytizen: Sociohistorical Debts and the Limits of Psychology as Engineering for Democracy; Jorge Castro Tejerina and Marcos Jose Bernal Marcos.
Chapter 11. Nurturing Democratic Citizens: A Commitment for Psychology? Alberto Rosa and Maria Fernanda Gonzalez.
Chapter 12. Educating for Democracy: Entrepreneurship Education as a Democratic Discipline? Steffen Erno.
Chapter 13. Historical Representations as Contributions to the Road Toward Actualized Democracy; Mario Carretero.
Part V. Concluding Response.
Chapter 14. Psychology as a Science of Human Plasticity; Fathali M. Moghaddam.
About the Contributors.