内容説明
Author featured on the hit NetFlix series How to Become A Tyrant!
In this book, author Fathali M. Moghaddam applies current psychological theories on intergroup relations to a variety of cultures and conflicts across the globe. While focusing primarily on the effect of globalization and how it facilitates cultural homogenization, Moghaddam examines what psychological research and theory can teach us about democracy and policies for managing diversity. Moghaddam skillfully crafts an argument for implementing contextualized democracy, that is, the use of local cultural symbols and meaning systems as a way of strengthening democratic trends and bringing into place a democratic state.
目次
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
I. Diversity in International and National Contexts
Multiculturalism, Democracy, and Intergroup Relations: International and National Contexts
Constructing Groups: Biology, Culture, and Categorization
II. Psychological Themes, Theory, and Research
Rationality: From Freud to the Authoritarian Personality
The Materialist View: From Realistic Conflict Theory to Evolutionary Psychology
Identity: From Social Identity Theory to Optimal Distinctiveness Theory
Subjective Justice: From Equity Theory to Relative Deprivation Theory
III. Psychological Foundations of Policies
Psychological Foundations of Assimilation
Psychological Foundations of Multiculturalism
References
Author Index
Subject Index
About the Author
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