This article describes implicit assumptions, and clinical and political implications, of prescriptions for psychological services in the aftermath of terrorism-created disaster. The article is one of a series in IBPP that focuses on crisis psychology, stress management, and critical incident debriefing in an era of a United States Government (USG)-announced war on terrorism with global reach
This article provides a commentary on the utility of terror management theory in understanding, expl...
The author discusses the phenomenon of panic in a wartime setting because of psychological warfare, ...
This article posits three very noxious consequences of common counterterrorism approaches to catastr...
This article addresses the response of many United States (US) professional mental health authoritie...
This article identifies paradoxes and conceptual difficulties with behavioral scientists and expert ...
This article critiques the assumptions of psychological services offered in response to disaster
This article describes the varied classes of terrorist victims affected by terrorist operations or t...
Several recurring Issues in the political psychology analysis of terrorism are illustrated in anothe...
This article describes a psychological phenomenon that might lead to the backfiring of an attempt at...
This article discusses psychological pathways to suicidal terrorism. This discussion includes aspec...
The purpose of this article is to identify elements of the psychological terror wrought through terr...
This article discusses the theory of terror management, and the psychology of terrorism
This article differentiates violence and its threat through terrorism and through other psychologica...
This article presents the construct of symptom substitution as a heuristic to delineate the likely, ...
Terrorism remains one of the most serious global problems, affecting a very large number of people, ...
This article provides a commentary on the utility of terror management theory in understanding, expl...
The author discusses the phenomenon of panic in a wartime setting because of psychological warfare, ...
This article posits three very noxious consequences of common counterterrorism approaches to catastr...
This article addresses the response of many United States (US) professional mental health authoritie...
This article identifies paradoxes and conceptual difficulties with behavioral scientists and expert ...
This article critiques the assumptions of psychological services offered in response to disaster
This article describes the varied classes of terrorist victims affected by terrorist operations or t...
Several recurring Issues in the political psychology analysis of terrorism are illustrated in anothe...
This article describes a psychological phenomenon that might lead to the backfiring of an attempt at...
This article discusses psychological pathways to suicidal terrorism. This discussion includes aspec...
The purpose of this article is to identify elements of the psychological terror wrought through terr...
This article discusses the theory of terror management, and the psychology of terrorism
This article differentiates violence and its threat through terrorism and through other psychologica...
This article presents the construct of symptom substitution as a heuristic to delineate the likely, ...
Terrorism remains one of the most serious global problems, affecting a very large number of people, ...
This article provides a commentary on the utility of terror management theory in understanding, expl...
The author discusses the phenomenon of panic in a wartime setting because of psychological warfare, ...
This article posits three very noxious consequences of common counterterrorism approaches to catastr...