The Psychology of Political Behavior in a Time of Change

Bibliografske podrobnosti
Korporativna značnica: SpringerLink (Online service)
Drugi avtorji: Sinnott, Jan D. (Editor), Rabin, Joan S. (Editor)
Izvleček:XIII, 637 p. 6 illus., 5 illus. in color.
text
Jezik:angleščina
Izdano: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2021.
Izdaja:1st ed. 2021.
Serija:Identity in a Changing World,
Teme:
Online dostop:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-38270-4
Format: Elektronski eKnjiga
Kazalo:
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Blue brain, red brain: The biopsychology of political beliefs and behaviors
  • 3 Behavioral epigenetics: The underpinnings of political psychology
  • 4 How diversity in nature impacts political psychology
  • 5 Psychology, politics and complex thought: A time for postformal thought in politics
  • 6 How do cognitive styles influence political attitudes? A joint consideration of dual-process model and construal level theory
  • 7 Understanding polarization through a cognitive lens
  • 8 Postformal psychology: The new normal in times of exponential change
  • 9 Political cognition: The unconscious mechanisms underlying political beliefs and actions
  • 10 How psychological processes impact voter decision making
  • 11 How belief in conspiracy theories addresses some basic human needs
  • 12 Why is populism so robustly associated with conspiratorial thinking? Collective thinking and the meaning maintenance model
  • 13 Pathways to social connection and civility in a time of political and social polarization
  • 14 Voice and votes: Gender, power and politics
  • 15 Political identity development in a changing world
  • 16 Nonverbal cues in leadership
  • 17 Inclusion of conservatives in science: Acknowledging liberal and conservative social cognition to improve public science attitudes
  • 18 Can we deliberate? How motivated reasoning undermines Democratic deliberation and what we can do about it
  • 19 American national identity: Issues of race, culture, social class, gender and politics affected by social change
  • 20 "Authoritarian responses to social change: Psychological mechanisms underlying the election of Donald Trump
  • 21 Psychological mechanisms underlying the populist threat to democracy
  • 22 Trumped: Making sense of the “Narcissist-in-Chief”
  • 23 Psychological reactions to “House of Cards”: The role of transportation and identification
  • 24 Political betrayal, political agency, and international politics
  • 25 (De)humanization of Muslim immigrants: Newspaper discourse and public responses during the UK 2015 general election
  • 26 Quantitative and qualitative methods of predicting geopolitical events
  • 27 Control and counter-control in Brazilian public policies: Conjectures from a humanist-contextualist behaviorism.