To understand the psychology of those who engage in terrorism, John Horgan draws on interviews with terrorists and analyzes current evidence to argue that only by asking the right questions about this complex problem, and by answering them with evidence, can we truly begin to understand the nature...
John Horgan, The Psychology of Terrorism (London: Routledge, 2005), 61-62.Horgan, J. (2017).`Psychology of Terrorism: Introduction to the Special Issue.' American Psychologist, 72 (3), 199-204.John Horgan, The Psychology of Terrorism (London: Routledge, 2005); Scott Atran, ...
Department of Psychology, New School for Social Research, 66 West 12th Street, New York, NY, 10011, USA Hammad Sheikh & Jeremy Ginges Centre for the Resolution of Intractable Conflicts, CRIC, Department of Politics and International Relations and Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford, Ma...
and among the topics is the term “military” which brings up ten awards. The topic “peace” does not exist in this list. Why should psychology give grants for the study of the military
GN Holmbeck - 《Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology》 被引量: 4252发表: 1997年 Deradicalization or disengagement? A process in need of clarity and a counterterrorism initiative in need of evaluation As a result of the overwhelming preoccupation with uncovering the process of radicalization ...
their own people, the experience of those victims is likely to mirror experiences of populations in the Global South where most state terrorism occurs. Secondly, while state terrorism has often involved the use of terror by a state of the Global South against its own people, as in the case ...
[13] Horgan, J. (2003) The Search for the Terrorist Personality. In Silke, A., Ed., Terrorists, Victims, and Society: Psychological Perspectives on Terrorism and Its Consequences, Wiley Series in Psychology of Crime, Policing, and Law, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Chichester and Hoboken, 101...
Steven Pinker’s recent book The Better Angels of Our Nature lends weighty support to this view. Pinker, a professor of psychology at Harvard University, draws on recent research in history, psychology, cognitive science, economics, and sociology to argue that our era is less violent, less crue...
Interviewing the terrorists: reflections on fieldwork and implications for psychological research John Horgan Volume 4, Issue 3, 2012 Mechanisms of Political Radicalization: Pathways Toward Terrorism Clark McCauley, et al. Volume 20, Issue 3, 2008 Bringing Global Jihad to the Horn of Africa: ...
She has published widely on topics spanning moral theory, metaethics, moral psychology, and related areas in venues such as Ethics, Philosophy & Public Affairs, Philosophy & Phenomenological Research, Philosophical Studies, and the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. She co-edited, with Christine ...