|
 |
Listserv Message Center

 |
Call for Papers Extended |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Posted by: | Thomas Arciszewski |
Title/Position: | Researcher |
School/Organization: | Aix Marseille University |
Sent to listserv of: | SPSP, SESP, SPSSI |
Date posted: | February 18th, 2009 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Second Call for Papers: Deadline Extended to March 16th
International Review of Social Psychology
Special Issue: Social Psychological Perspectives on Terrorism: Processes, Causes and Consequences.
Guest Editors:
Thomas Arciszewski (Aix-Marseille University)
Arie Kruglanski (University of Maryland)
Jean-François Verlhiac (University Paris 10)
International Review of Social Psychology seeks submissions for a special issue on terrorism.
IRSP special issue will be one of the first, if not the first, attempt to gather social psychological views on terrorism in a European journal. Even if terrorism is a very important question of our time, not very much articles focus on the specificity of European field, for example the link with Muslim immigration and identity, or the consequences of the last terrorist acts (outside the clinical field, e.g., PTSD). We stay open, of course, to any other studies that cover possible causes for terrorism, for joining terrorist movement, as well as potential consequences on people perceptions, judgments, and behaviors. Interesting starting points or topics could be:
(1) Sympathy for terrorist group and attraction for that area of ideas and attitudes
(2) Judgment and stigmatization of groups perceived as linked to terrorism
(3) Cognitive, behavioral and emotional lay responses to the perception of terrorist act
(4) Societal and political consequences
We seek a set of empirical papers, original data and contributions, report new findings, meta-analyses, or possibly theoretical pieces that go beyond merely summarizing a research area and that describe new conceptualizations or link existing research findings and theorizing to specific context and policy.
Submissions should be made electronically to Thomas Arciszewski (thomas.arciszewski@univ-provence.fr) and to Jean-François Verlhiac (jean-francois.verlhiac@u-paris10.fr). Papers should be in English and about 6000-7000 words including the abstract, references, tables and acknowledgments. In the submission letter, indicate that the manuscript is submitted for consideration for publication in the Special Issue on Terrorism. Please direct inquiries to the guest editors.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
|