The Palgrave Handbook of Global Political Psychology

This collection recalibrates the study of political psychology through detailed and much needed analysis of the discipline's most important and hotly contested issues. It advances our understanding of the psychological mechanisms that drive political phen

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Catarina Kinnvall & Tereza Capelos with Henk Dekker

Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology Series The Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology book series profiles a range of innovative contributions that investigate the leading political issues and perspectives of our time. The academic field of political psychology has been developing for almost 50 years and is now a well-established subfield of enquiry in the North American academy. In the context of new global forces of political challenge and change as well as rapidly evolving political practices and political identities, Palgrave Studies in Political Psychology builds upon the North American foundations through profiling studies from Europe and the broader global context. From a theoretical perspective, the series incorporates constructionist, historical, (post)structuralist and postcolonial analyses. Methodologically, the series is open to a range of approaches to political psychology. Psychoanalytic approaches, critical social psychology, critical discourse analysis, Social Identity Theory, rhetorical analysis, social representations and a range of quantitative and qualitative methodologies exemplify the range of approaches to the empirical world welcomed in the series. The series integrates approaches to political psychology that address matters of urgency and concern from a global perspective, including theories and perspectives on world politics and a range of international issues: the rise of social protest movements for democratic change, notably in the global South and the Middle East; the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and its broader implications; patterns of global migration and associated challenges of integration and religious accommodation; the formation and deformation of political, economic, and strategic transnational entities such as the European Union; conflicts and violence resulting from local and regional nationalisms; emerging political movements of the new left and the new right; ethnic violence; legacies of war and colonization; and class conflict. Series editors Tereza Capelos is Senior Lecturer at the University of Surrey, UK, Vice-President of the International Society of Political Psychology, Co-chair of the ECPR Political Psychology Standing Group, and Director of the International Society of Political Psychology Summer Academy (ISPP-SA). Henk Dekker is Professor of Political Socialization and Integration at the Graduate School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Associate Professor of Political Science at the Institute of Political Science, and Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences of Leiden University. He is a recipient of the Nevitt Sanford Award from the International Society of Political Psychology. Catarina Kinnvall is Professor at the Department of Political Science, Lund University, Sweden and former Vice-President of the International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP). Paul Nesbitt-Larking is Professor of Political Science at Huron University College, Canada, and Visiting Professor, School of Health

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