Volume 13, Number 2, June 2015 - APSA-CD
... in ways that emphasize the evolving nature of transnational forces, linkages and flows since (at least) the last five centuries when not one, but several “globalizations” and “de-globalizations” are deemed to have taken place. 1 This piece approaches these topics from the perspective of an historian ...
... in ways that emphasize the evolving nature of transnational forces, linkages and flows since (at least) the last five centuries when not one, but several “globalizations” and “de-globalizations” are deemed to have taken place. 1 This piece approaches these topics from the perspective of an historian ...
The Experimental Political Scientist
... spans subfields and disciplines. The imagination that fuels experimental research flows from substantive expertise of scholars across political science and the social sciences more generally. The new Section provides a forum for scholarly exchange about experimental design and analysis, helping rese ...
... spans subfields and disciplines. The imagination that fuels experimental research flows from substantive expertise of scholars across political science and the social sciences more generally. The new Section provides a forum for scholarly exchange about experimental design and analysis, helping rese ...
AP Psychology Syllabus
... 6. Identify the three main levels of analysis in the biopsychosocial approach, and explain why psychology’s varied perspectives are complementary. 7. Identify some of psychology’s subfields, and explain the difference between clinical psychology and psychiatry. 8. State five effective study techniqu ...
... 6. Identify the three main levels of analysis in the biopsychosocial approach, and explain why psychology’s varied perspectives are complementary. 7. Identify some of psychology’s subfields, and explain the difference between clinical psychology and psychiatry. 8. State five effective study techniqu ...
Politics and HIV/AIDS: An Overview
... The UNRISD studies illuminate several factors. First, history does matter. HIV/AIDS responses have adapted learning from decades of family planning, smoking and other public health initiatives. However, the political and economic history that informs contemporary conditions and attitudes is largely ...
... The UNRISD studies illuminate several factors. First, history does matter. HIV/AIDS responses have adapted learning from decades of family planning, smoking and other public health initiatives. However, the political and economic history that informs contemporary conditions and attitudes is largely ...
Historical Thinking as a Tool for Theoretical Psychology
... In this chapter, I discuss the relevance of historical thinking for theoretical and philosophical psychology. In particular, I am interested in how historical thought styles (Fleck 1979) can be used as tools for theoretical psychology. In the follow ing reconstructions, five approaches of historica ...
... In this chapter, I discuss the relevance of historical thinking for theoretical and philosophical psychology. In particular, I am interested in how historical thought styles (Fleck 1979) can be used as tools for theoretical psychology. In the follow ing reconstructions, five approaches of historica ...
... Given the theoretical importance of political tolerance it has been the subject of numerous empirical studies in democratization, participation, and system effectiveness. It is hardly surprising that many of these studies have tried to determine the extent to which support for tolerance exists among ...
Thomas Nast - Celina City Schools
... Nast has been called the father of modern American political cartooning. He is best known for his cartoons exposing the corruption of Boss Tweed’s political machine. ...
... Nast has been called the father of modern American political cartooning. He is best known for his cartoons exposing the corruption of Boss Tweed’s political machine. ...
televised political satire: the new media - OAKTrust Home
... feels is right and goes with his gut rather than the advice he’s given which may be based in facts that could simply be untrustworthy. Colbert’s character presents “truthiness” as a positive thing, but it’s clear that the joke is that it really isn’t. “Truthiness” thus is a way of criticizing public ...
... feels is right and goes with his gut rather than the advice he’s given which may be based in facts that could simply be untrustworthy. Colbert’s character presents “truthiness” as a positive thing, but it’s clear that the joke is that it really isn’t. “Truthiness” thus is a way of criticizing public ...
Is Public Opinion Stable? Resolving the Micro
... finding here is that opinions change and any effects (e.g., from a certain type of question at one point in time) quickly decay (e.g., Chong and Druckman 2010). For example, when individuals receive the terrorism version of the Patriot Act question, they likely become more supportive of the Act. Ye ...
... finding here is that opinions change and any effects (e.g., from a certain type of question at one point in time) quickly decay (e.g., Chong and Druckman 2010). For example, when individuals receive the terrorism version of the Patriot Act question, they likely become more supportive of the Act. Ye ...
Common Curriculum Map Discipline: Social Science Course: American Studies – Social Studies
... 16.A.4a Analyze and report historical events to determine cause-and-effect relationships. 16.A.5a Analyze historical and contemporary developments using methods of historical inquiry (pose questions, collect and analyze data, make and support inferences with evidence, report findings). 16.A.4b Compa ...
... 16.A.4a Analyze and report historical events to determine cause-and-effect relationships. 16.A.5a Analyze historical and contemporary developments using methods of historical inquiry (pose questions, collect and analyze data, make and support inferences with evidence, report findings). 16.A.4b Compa ...
Annual Reveiw of Critical Psychology 2013
... mainstream psychology has not sufficiently attended to the social problems that are prevalent in non-Western countries: the effects of poverty, drug abuse, problems of living in too confined quarters and of not being able to read and write” (Allwood, 2005, p. 85). What do critical psychologists cont ...
... mainstream psychology has not sufficiently attended to the social problems that are prevalent in non-Western countries: the effects of poverty, drug abuse, problems of living in too confined quarters and of not being able to read and write” (Allwood, 2005, p. 85). What do critical psychologists cont ...
What is Propaganda?
... German soldier and leader of an obscure right-wing extremist party in Bavaria. "Propaganda," he wrote five years after the war, "is a truly terrible weapon in the hands of an expert." ...
... German soldier and leader of an obscure right-wing extremist party in Bavaria. "Propaganda," he wrote five years after the war, "is a truly terrible weapon in the hands of an expert." ...
Critical psychology in South Africa:
... marginalisation of black perspectives (even in critical psychology) and women’s perspectives (also even in critical psychology) and the broader power–knowledge complexes that linked psychological technologies to the regulation of subjectivities and bodies through government – wrought from a series ...
... marginalisation of black perspectives (even in critical psychology) and women’s perspectives (also even in critical psychology) and the broader power–knowledge complexes that linked psychological technologies to the regulation of subjectivities and bodies through government – wrought from a series ...
The Impact of Tolerance on Political Behavior
... aggregate model, based as it is on an uncertain inference, to seeking an individual level explanation of the variation in levels of tolerance. This model escapes the problem of that tenuous inference by directly measuring attitudes held by individuals. Arwine and Mayer therefore take an array of ind ...
... aggregate model, based as it is on an uncertain inference, to seeking an individual level explanation of the variation in levels of tolerance. This model escapes the problem of that tenuous inference by directly measuring attitudes held by individuals. Arwine and Mayer therefore take an array of ind ...
Accounting for the Child in the Transmission of Party Identification
... stimulate political learning through civics education, reciting the pledge of allegiance, or extracurricular activities such as student government (Hess and Torney-Purta 1967; Nie, Junn, and Stehlik-Barry 1996). College, on the other hand, invites a more complex process of political socialization th ...
... stimulate political learning through civics education, reciting the pledge of allegiance, or extracurricular activities such as student government (Hess and Torney-Purta 1967; Nie, Junn, and Stehlik-Barry 1996). College, on the other hand, invites a more complex process of political socialization th ...
Political Irrelevance, Democracy, and the Limits of Militarized Conflict
... stakes involved and distance attenuates them: ‘‘States may be more willing to fight over events or issues that are closer to home because they are considered more important than those farther away. . . . Thus, territorial proximity influences both the opportunity and willingness of states to enter w ...
... stakes involved and distance attenuates them: ‘‘States may be more willing to fight over events or issues that are closer to home because they are considered more important than those farther away. . . . Thus, territorial proximity influences both the opportunity and willingness of states to enter w ...
“Psychology Works” Fact Sheet: Perfectionism
... What is perfectionism? Perfectionism is a multidimensional personality style that is associated with a large number of psychological, interpersonal, and achievement-related difficulties. It is not a disorder but a vulnerability factor that produces problems for adults, adolescents, and children. Oft ...
... What is perfectionism? Perfectionism is a multidimensional personality style that is associated with a large number of psychological, interpersonal, and achievement-related difficulties. It is not a disorder but a vulnerability factor that produces problems for adults, adolescents, and children. Oft ...
The Idea of an Overlapping Consensus
... The first feature of a political conception of justice is that, while such a conception is, of course, a moral conception, it is a moral conception worked out for a specific kind of subject, namely, for political, social and economic institutions.2In particular,it is worked out to apply to what we m ...
... The first feature of a political conception of justice is that, while such a conception is, of course, a moral conception, it is a moral conception worked out for a specific kind of subject, namely, for political, social and economic institutions.2In particular,it is worked out to apply to what we m ...
An Asymmetric Nonlinear Process - American National Election
... hypothesis refers specifically to situations in which a perceiver has no information at all about a target. Lau and Sears (1979) focussed on evaluations of politicians about whom respondents had a great deal of information, so their study did not test the positivity offset. ...
... hypothesis refers specifically to situations in which a perceiver has no information at all about a target. Lau and Sears (1979) focussed on evaluations of politicians about whom respondents had a great deal of information, so their study did not test the positivity offset. ...
Interest Groups and Political Attitudes
... self-interested groups as argument sources rather than the unbiased experts often examined in psychological studies of source credibility. For example, Lupia (1994) showed that individuals could vote congruent with their self-interest by voting with particular interest groups’ endorsements, but more ...
... self-interested groups as argument sources rather than the unbiased experts often examined in psychological studies of source credibility. For example, Lupia (1994) showed that individuals could vote congruent with their self-interest by voting with particular interest groups’ endorsements, but more ...
Comparative Essays (2006
... parliamentary elections. Explain one reason why they formed a coalition. Describe a domestic policy issue that has threatened the coalition. Statement X: The rate of population growth has decreased in Iran since the 1990s. Statement Y: Developing countries should adopt population growth policies sim ...
... parliamentary elections. Explain one reason why they formed a coalition. Describe a domestic policy issue that has threatened the coalition. Statement X: The rate of population growth has decreased in Iran since the 1990s. Statement Y: Developing countries should adopt population growth policies sim ...
Political Liberalism, Political Independence, and Moral Authority
... One doesn’t have to be a consequentialist, or even a welfarist, about morality to accept Welfare as Reason. This reason could be overruled, perhaps even trivially overruled, by a wide range of agent-centered permissions, restrictions, etc. But it seems entirely implausible to believe that our moral ...
... One doesn’t have to be a consequentialist, or even a welfarist, about morality to accept Welfare as Reason. This reason could be overruled, perhaps even trivially overruled, by a wide range of agent-centered permissions, restrictions, etc. But it seems entirely implausible to believe that our moral ...
Off the wall political discourse: Facebook use in the 2008 US
... equipment and networking infrastructure have become more ubiquitous and less costly, researchers have begun to postulate that discrepancies in internet use may be due largely to skill gaps and not to access inequities [9,23,35]. Prior research has explicated the role of social networks in shaping an ...
... equipment and networking infrastructure have become more ubiquitous and less costly, researchers have begun to postulate that discrepancies in internet use may be due largely to skill gaps and not to access inequities [9,23,35]. Prior research has explicated the role of social networks in shaping an ...
chapter i - Sacramento - California State University
... campaigns succeed and others fail. The CMP identified a correlation between campaigns that fail and: (1) giving the people or followers inaccurate predictions about what the leader will do in office (such was the case in Jimmy Carter’s 1976 speech that focused on personal morals and was later oversh ...
... campaigns succeed and others fail. The CMP identified a correlation between campaigns that fail and: (1) giving the people or followers inaccurate predictions about what the leader will do in office (such was the case in Jimmy Carter’s 1976 speech that focused on personal morals and was later oversh ...
The Rule of Reasons. Three Models of Deliberative Democracy
... Rawls' theory (and also Larmore's) tries to steer a middle way between Ackerman's pragmatic and Nagel's (later revised; see Nagel 1991, chap. 14) objectivist approach. To be reasonable, he explains, has two aspects: ``the willingness to propose fair terms of cooperation and to abide by them provided ...
... Rawls' theory (and also Larmore's) tries to steer a middle way between Ackerman's pragmatic and Nagel's (later revised; see Nagel 1991, chap. 14) objectivist approach. To be reasonable, he explains, has two aspects: ``the willingness to propose fair terms of cooperation and to abide by them provided ...