|
Abstract: . . . Barbara Ehrenreich. 1999. Doing It for Ourselves: Can Feminism Survive Class Polarization? In These Times. 23(26): 10-12. Needs and Preferences: What you want. What you need. What youll settle for. R, 1/27 Political Psychology of Satisfaction: Needs, Motives, and Symbols Sigmund Freud. 1993. Civilization and Its Discontents In N. Kressel, , ed. Political Psychology . New York: Paragon. pp.64-67. Murray Edelman. 1964. Introduction, The Symbolic Uses of Politics . Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp.1-21. E.J. Dionne. 2002. Inevitably, The Politics of Terror: Fear Has Become Part of Washingtons Power Struggle. The Washington Post . May 25: B1. T, 2/1 Political Psychology of Bounded Rationality: Preferences, Limitations, and Choices Jon Gertner. 2003. The Futile Pursuit of Happiness New York Times Magazine. 5 pages. Herbert A. Simon. 1993. A Cognitive . . . . . . Responses to Genocide: Participants, Bystanders, and Rescuers R, 4/28 Participation in Genocide: Enthusiasm and Obedience, Social and Institutional Contexts James M. Glass. 1997. Against the Indifference Hypothesis: The Holocaust and the Enthusiasts for Murder. Political Psychology . 18(1): 129-45. John Sabini and Maury Silver. Destroying the Innocent with a Clear Conscience: A Sociopsychology of the Holocaust. In N. Kressel, ed. Political Psychology . pp.192-217. T, 5/3 Bystanders: Self-Interest, Distraction, Rationalization, Framing, Indifference
Milton Mayer. 1966. But Then It was Too Late. They Thought They Were Free: The Germans, 1933-45. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp.166-73. Michael N. Barnett. 1997. The UN Security Council, Indifference, and Genocide in Rwanda. Cultural Anthropology. 12(4): 551-78. *** Discussion . . . . . . Responses to Genocide: Participants, Bystanders, and Rescuers R, 4/28 Participation in Genocide: Enthusiasm and Obedience, Social and Institutional Contexts James M. Glass. 1997. Against the Indifference Hypothesis: The Holocaust and the Enthusiasts for Murder. Political Psychology . 18(1): 129-45. John Sabini and Maury Silver. Destroying the Innocent with a Clear Conscience: A Sociopsychology of the Holocaust. In N. Kressel, ed. Political Psychology . pp.192-217. T, 5/3 Bystanders: Self-Interest, Distraction, Rationalization, Framing, Indifference
Milton Mayer. 1966. But Then It was Too Late. They Thought They Were Free: The Germans, 1933-45. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp.166-73. Michael N. Barnett. 1997. The UN Security Council, Indifference, and Genocide in Rwanda. Cultural Anthropology. 12(4): 551-78. *** Discussion Sections . . . --3000,3,500,3244,22473
|