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Christopher J. Hewer is Senior Lecturer in Social and Political Psychology at Kingston University, London where he teaches critical social psychology and the psychology of art and film. His research interests focus on collective memory, shifting memorialization and forgetting in cultural discourse.
Evanthia Lyons is Head of School and Professor of Social and Political Psychology at Kingston University, London, UK. Her research focuses on people's understanding of political processes and the factors that influence their engagement in conventional and unconventional political actions.
List of Contributors xv
Preface xx
CHAPTER 1 Some Historical and Philosophical Considerations 1Christopher J. Hewer
When People Come Together 3
Social Psychology 4
The Development of Religious Identities 5
Intersecting Histories: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam 5
The Issue of Governance 8
Transformations in the Twentieth Century 8
The Social and Moral Order 10
The Search for Scientific Understanding 11
Psychology: A New Way of Seeing the World 12
The Influence of Political Philosophy on Social Psychology 14
Locating the Root of Human Behavior 15
Social Cognition 17
A Societal Approach to Political Psychology 18
Social Constructionism 19
The Social Construction of Reality 22
Summary 24
Glossary 24
Further Reading 26
Questions for Group Discussion 27
CHAPTER 2 A Critical History of Research Methods 28Ron Roberts and Christopher J. Hewer
What Do We Want to Know About the World and Why? 30
How Can We Know the World? 31
Searching for Universal Laws of Behavior 32
The Computability Problem 33
The Historic Nature of Research Findings 35
The Origin of Statistics 37
The Construction of Norms, Normality, and Normalcy 38
Using Statistical Measures and Models for Political Purposes 40
The Null Hypothesis Significance Test 43
Bayesian Methods 45
The Issue of Replication 47
The File Drawer Effect 48
A Cautionary Note on Theory 48
Conclusions 50
Summary 50
Glossary 51
Further Reading 52
Questions for Group Discussion 53
CHAPTER 3 From Alienation to Estrangement: Political Thought and Psychology 54Ron Roberts
Mechanistic Models 56
Karl Marx 57
Alienation 58
Erich Fromm 59
R. D. Laing 61
Mystification 61
Michel Foucault 62
Discursive Regimes, Power, and Freedom 63
Disciplinary boundaries 63
Politics and governance of the self 64
Svetlana Boym 66
Estrangement 66
Off-modern psychology 68
Art and dissent 69
Summary 70
Glossary 71
Further Reading 71
Questions for Group Discussion 71
CHAPTER 4 The Politics of Psychological Language: Discourse and Rhetoric 73Simon Locke
Discursive Psychology, Rhetorical Psychology, and Cognitive Psychology 75
The Scientific Laboratory 76
The Validity of Experiments and Surveys 77
Language, Discourse, and Rhetoric 78
Arguing and Thinking 80
Relativism and Ideology-or the DP-CA/RP-CDA Fandango 81
Ideology 83
Critical Discourse Analysis 84
The Politics of Experience 85
Conspiracy Discourse 86
A Cognitive Approach to Conspiracy 87
Reinstating the Thinking Person 88
Summary 90
Glossary 90
Further Reading 91
Questions for Group Discussion 92
CHAPTER 5 Identity 93Christopher J. Hewer and Evanthia Lyons
Identity and Human Relations 95
Categorization 95
Self and Society 96
Occupational Identity: Roles and Performance 97
Political Mobilization: National Identity and Nationalism 98
Identity Threats 101
Identity Politics 102
Image, Images, and Appearance 104
Political Identities 106
Social Identity Theory 106
Identity Process Theory 108
Discursive Approaches to Identity 109
Narrative Identities 111
Conclusions 111
Summary 112
Glossary 112
Further Reading 113
Questions for Group Discussion 113
CHAPTER 6 Narrating as Political Action 114Brian Schiff
Psychology and Politics 116
Speech and Political Action 117
The Personal and Political Nature of Narrative 117
Expansive Political Narratives 118
Psychoanalytic and Personological Tradition 119
Narrative Approaches 119
Narrative Hermeneutics 120
Narrative and Narrating 120
Intensifying Persons and Social Context 121
Collective Memory 121
Repression 122
Relational Contexts 123
Meanings and Action 123
Producers and Consumers of Memory 124
Palestinians with Israeli Citizenship 124
Hiba: The Real Story 125
Lana: Torn Between the Two 128
Conclusions 130
Summary 131
Glossary 132
Further Reading 132
Questions for Group Discussion 132
CHAPTER 7 Connecting Social Exclusion and Agency: Social Class Matters 134Sarah Jay, Orla Muldoon, and Caroline Howarth
Class Matters 136
Cultural Capital 138
The Precariat 139
Capitalist Restructuring and Poverty 140
Stigma 141
Collective Identities 141
The Individualization of Class 142
Agency and Social Class 143
Social Capital 144
Cultural Incompatibility in Education 145
Threats to Identity 146
The Transmission of Cultural Capital 146
Implications for a Social and Political Psychology of Social Exclusion 147
Conclusions 148
Summary 149
Glossary 150
Further Reading 150
Questions for Group Discussion 150
CHAPTER 8 Migration 152Spyridoula Ntani, Artemis M. Griva, and Xenia Chryssochoou
Prejudice, Stereotypes, and Discrimination Against Immigrants 155
Stereotyping, Racism, and Forms of Discrimination Against Immigrant Groups 155
Explanations of Prejudice 156
Individual and Collective Reactions to Prejudice 157
Reducing Prejudice? The Contact Hypothesis 158
Changing Societies: The Issue of Acculturation 159
Changing Individuals: The Issue of Adaptation 162
Calling for a New Social Organization: The Paradox of Integration 163
Summary 166
Glossary 166
Further Reading 167
Questions for Group Discussion 167
CHAPTER 9 Political Decision-Making 168Jack S. Levy
The Levels-of-Analysis Framework 171
The Rational Model of Judgment and Decision-Making 173
Psychological Models of Information Processing 175
Cognitive Biases 176
Motivated Biases 180
Psychological Models of Choice 182
Prospect Theory 183
Conclusion 185
Summary 186
Glossary 186
Further Reading 188
Questions for Group Discussion 188
CHAPTER 10 Foreign Policy and Identity 189Emma O'Dwyer
Foreign Policy and Identity: Conceptual and Theoretical Anchors 192
The Influence of Citizens on Foreign Policy 193
Outgroup Perceptions and Foreign Policy Attitudes 194
A Case Study: Irish Neutrality 196
Irish Neutrality in Context 196
The Social Representation of Irish Neutrality 198
Cead Mile Failte Neutrality 199
The Macropolitical Dimension of Identity Construction 200
Constructing the National Ingroup in International Affairs 201
Unanswered Questions: Opportunities for Future Research 202
Summary 203
Glossary 204
Further Reading 205
Questions for Group Discussion 205
CHAPTER 11 Social Memory and the Collective Past 207Christopher J. Hewer
The Role of the Past in the Formation of Identity 209
The Social Nature of Memory 211
Taxonomies and Classifications 212
The Resurgence of Interest in the Collective Past 213
Competing Memory Narratives 214
Communicative and Cultural Memory 216
How to Study the Collective Past 217
Landscape, Social Space, and Memory 217
Narratives 221
Social Representations of History 221
The Nature of Representations 222
Memory as Performance 224
The Collective Pasts of Families, Groups, and Organizations 224
Time Conceptions 225
The Politics of Remembering and Forgetting 226
The Individual and the Collective Past 227
Summary 228
Glossary 228
Further Reading 229
Questions for Group Discussion 229
CHAPTER 12 Crowds, Social Identities, and the Shaping of Everyday Social Relations 231Fergus G. Neville and Stephen D. Reicher
The Political Significance of Social Identities 233
Classic Crowd Psychology: The Loss of Individual Identity in the Mass 235
Dispositional Theories: The Accentuation of Individual Characteristics in the Mass 236
Crowds and the Expression of Social Identities 238
A Social Identity Model of Crowds 239
Crowds and the Construction of Social Identities 241
An Elaborated Social Identity Model of Crowds 243
The Impact of Crowds Beyond the Crowd 244
Contesting the Meaning of Crowd Behavior 247
Summary 250
Acknowledgments 250
Glossary 250
Further Reading 251
Questions for Group Discussion 251
CHAPTER 13 State Militarism and International Conflict 253Stephen Gibson
A Political Psychology of International Relations 256
The Individual-Social Dichotomy in Social and Political Psychology 257
Beyond Social Identity: Accounts of Military Service 259
Beyond Attitudes: Constructing Evaluations of the Iraq War 263
Concluding Remarks 268
Summary 269
Glossary 270
Further Reading 270
Questions for Group Discussion 270
CHAPTER 14 Social Influence and Malevolent Authority: Obedience Revisited 271Ron Roberts
Milgram's Studies of Obedience 273
How Did Milgram Interpret His Findings? 274
Ethics and Ecological Validity 274
Was There a Legitimate Parallel Between Milgram's Laboratory and Nazi Germany? 276
The Political and Historical Context of Milgram's Studies 278
The Contemporary Relevance of Milgram's Work 279
The Role of Science and Bureaucracy 281
The Holocaust and the Eichmann Trial 282
A Reinterpretation of Milgram's Studies 285
Free Will and Personal Responsibility 286
What Do We Learn From Milgram's Studies? 287
A Social Psychology of Resistance 288
Summary 290
Glossary 290
Further Reading 290
Questions for Group Discussion 291
CHAPTER 15 Intergroup Conflict, Peace, and Reconciliation 292J. Christopher Cohrs, Johanna R. Vollhardt, and Shelley McKeown
Intergroup Conflicts 295
Conflict Analysis 296
Conflict Management, Resolution, and Transformation 298
Conflict Resolution 299
Principles of Conflict Resolution 300
Achieving Conflict Resolution 300
Conflict Transformation 301
Conflict Transformation in Practice 302
Postconflict Reconstruction and Reconciliation 303
Social Psychological Definitions of Reconciliation 304
Instrumental Reconciliation 304
The Role of History and Power 304
Socioemotional Reconciliation and the Needs-Based Model of Reconciliation 306
History as a Necessity for and an Obstacle to Reconciliation 307
Conclusion 309
Summary 309
Glossary 310
Further Reading 311
Questions for Group Discussion 311
References 313
Index 349
Xenia Chryssochoou obtained her Ph.D. from the University Rene Descartes-Paris V and taught at different universities in France, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom before returning to Greece where she is currently Professor of Social and Political Psychology at the University of Panteion in Athens. She is interested in the social psychological aspects of identity and its construction in liberal societies in relation to conflict, political participation, and questions of cultural diversity.
J. Christopher Cohrs is Professor of Psychology at Jacobs University, Bremen, Germany. After receiving his doctoral degree (Dr. Phil) in 2004 from the University of Bielefeld, Germany, he was Lecturer in Psychology at Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland. His research focuses on ideology, political attitudes, prejudice, and representations of intergroup conflict. He is cofounder and coeditor of the international open-access Journal of Social and Political Psychology.
Stephen Gibson is a social psychologist based at York St. John University, UK. His research interests are in the areas of dis/obedience, citizenship, and national identity, and representations of peace and conflict. His most recent work has examined the archived audio recordings of Stanley Milgram's obedience experiments in order to develop a perspective on these studies as rhetorical encounters. He is the coeditor of Representations of Peace and Conflict (with Simon Mollan, 2012), and Doing Your Qualitative Psychology Project (with Cath Sullivan and Sarah Riley, 2012).
Artemis M. Griva received her Ph.D. in social psychology in 2014. She is currently a researcher at the University of Crete, Greece, and her research focuses on the social psychology of identity, globalization, and the sociocultural aspects of government policy. She has worked on research projects funded by the European Union (EU) and is author of scholarly and policy-oriented publications.
Christopher J. Hewer is Senior Lecturer in Social and Political Psychology at Kingston University, London where he teaches critical social psychology and the psychology of art and film. His research interests focus on collective memory, shifting memorialization, and forgetting in cultural discourse. Recent projects have addressed issues arising from contemporary memory in Britain for the Allied bombing of Germany and the Falklands conflict. Other work has explored the social construction of terrorism, national identity in Kosovo, and attitudes to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in Republika Srpska.
Caroline Howarth is Associate Professor in the Department of Social Psychology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is committed to a form of social psychology that intersects with current social and political concerns-particularly those that lead to programs for social change. Living in multicultural communities in Kenya, South Africa, Papua New Guinea, and Fiji has influenced her approach to social psychology, directing her interests towards the political interconnections between community, identity, representation, and resistance. She is coeditor of Political Psychology, editor of Papers on Social Representations, and she publishes widely across social, community, and political psychology.
Sarah Jay is Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Limerick, Ireland. Her research integrates social psychology with sociological theory, and explores social class as a system of inequality. The objective of her research is to promote social justice and to use social psychology to examine and expose taken for granted systems that advantage the powerful.
Jack S. Levy is Board of Governors' Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University, and an Affiliate of the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University. He is past-president of the International Studies Association and of the Peace Science Society. His primary research interests focus on the causes of interstate war, foreign policy decision-making, political psychology, and qualitative methodology. He is author of War in the Modern Great Power System, 1495-1975 (1983); coauthor (with William R. Thompson) of Causes of War (2010) and of The Arc of War: Origins, Escalation, and Transformation (2011); and co-editor of Explaining War and Peace: Case Studies and Necessary Condition Counterfactuals (with Gary Goertz, 2007), The Oxford Handbook of Political Psychology, 2nd ed. (with Leonie Huddy and David O. Sears, 2013), and The Outbreak of the First World War: Structure, Politics, and Decision-Making (with John A. Vasquez, 2014).
Simon Locke was formerly Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Kingston University, UK. His research interests focus on rhetoric, conspiracy discourse, and the intersection between comic books and the public understanding of science. He is author of Re-Crafting Rationalisation: Enchanted Science and Mundane Mysteries (2011).
Evanthia Lyons is Professor of Social and Political Psychology at Kingston University, London, UK. Her research focuses on people's understanding of political processes and the factors that influence their engagement in conventional and unconventional political actions. She has recently completed an EU funded, multinational project looking at the processes that influence political participation among young people from different ethnic backgrounds. More recent work has focused on the way that people manage multiple group memberships; particularly, how different patterns of identification with ethnic, national, religious categories relate to prejudice, social stereotyping, political trust, and political violence. She is coeditor of Changing European Identities: Social Psychological Analyses of Social Change (with Glynis Breakwell, 1996) and Analysing Qualitative Data in Psychology 2nd ed. (with Adrian Coyle, 2016).
Shelley McKeown is Lecturer in Psychology in the Graduate School of Education at the University of Bristol. She received her Ph.D. in social psychology from the University of Ulster, Northern Ireland in 2012 where she was part of the Peace and Conflict Psychology Research Group. Her research focuses on understanding social identity processes and how best to reduce prejudice in diversity and conflict settings.
Orla Muldoon is Professor of Psychology, based in the Department of Psychology and Centre for Social Issues Research at the University of Limerick. Her broad research interests concern the impact of structural disadvantage on social identities and health and well-being.
Fergus G. Neville is Research Fellow at the School of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of St. Andrews. He is currently employed on an ESRC-funded project examining the process and limits of behavioral spread in crowds. His work broadly concerns the relationship between social identities, norms, and group behavior, with a particular focus on crowd action, and experience. Dr. Neville also publishes research on violence prevention, and the social determinants and outcomes of child and adolescent health. He is currently an Editorial Consultant for the British Journal of Social Psychology.
Spyridoula Ntani received her Ph.D. in social psychology from the University of Surrey, and she is currently a researcher at Panteion University, Greece. Her research focuses on the development of extreme ideologies and political participation in times of crisis. She has taught social psychology at undergraduate level at different universities in Greece and has participated in funded research projects on fundamental rights protection, health care inequalities, and gender issues.
Emma O'Dwyer is Senior Lecturer in Political Psychology at Kingston University, London. Her research broadly focuses on the ways in which individuals and groups understand and relate to foreign policy, wars, and military intervention. She has explored these issues in relation to Irish foreign policy and its link to national identity, lay understandings of armed drones, and peace activism.
Stephen D. Reicher, Wardlaw Professor, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St. Andrews is a Fellow of the British Academy, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and a Fellow of the Academy for Social Sciences. He is also former Chief Editor of the British Journal of Social Psychology and is a Scientific Consultant to Scientific American Mind. Professor Reicher's work concerns the relationship between social identities and collective practices. In approaching 300 publications, he has studied such issues as mass rhetoric and leadership, nationalism and national identities, social exclusion and intergroup hatred, and the psychology of obedience and tyranny. Throughout his career, he has been interested in crowd psychology and his work has transformed both our theoretical understanding of this field and also public order practices in Europe, North America, and beyond.
Ron Roberts is a Chartered Psychologist and Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society. He was formerly Senior Lecturer in Psychology at Kingston University and he previously held posts at the Institute of Psychiatry, University of Westminster, King's College Medical School, University College London, St. Bartholomew's Medical School, Queen Mary College, and the Tavistock Institute. He is the author of numerous research articles and books, including Parapsychology: The...
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