This review draws together articles from a range of different disciplines to highlight the central role played by social context and policing in the dynamics of crowd conflict. Accordingly, the review highlights the importance and value of interdisciplinary dialogue both in attempts to advance theoretical understanding of the dynamics through which crowd events become violent but also in using knowledge to advance and defend democratic and human rights-based forms of state intervention into crowd events
Theoretical perspectives that give primacy to ideological or structural determinism have dominated c...
Research on patterns of crowd violence across diverse events (including urban riots, protests, and f...
This paper uses recent developments in crowd psychology as the basis for developing new guidelines f...
This review draws together articles from a range of different disciplines to highlight the central r...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
Traditional crowd theory decontextualizes crowd incidents and explains behaviour entirely in terms o...
Crowd behaviour and collective action are integral to historical and political developments; they ar...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
This paper aims to extend the social identity approach to crowd behaviour (Reicher, 1984, 1987) in o...
Recent studies suggest that crowd conflict needs to be understood as an interaction between the crow...
This article explores the origins and ideology of classical crowd psychology, a body of theory refle...
Classical theories of crowd behaviour view crowd conflict as deriving from the pathology of the crow...
Social psychological research suggests that where police hold a theoretical view of the crowd in lin...
Theoretical perspectives that give primacy to ideological or structural determinism have dominated c...
This research was funded by a grant to John Drury, Clifford Stott and Steve Reicher from the Economi...
Theoretical perspectives that give primacy to ideological or structural determinism have dominated c...
Research on patterns of crowd violence across diverse events (including urban riots, protests, and f...
This paper uses recent developments in crowd psychology as the basis for developing new guidelines f...
This review draws together articles from a range of different disciplines to highlight the central r...
Experiences in crowds and protests can lead to psychological changes which are sustained by group pr...
Traditional crowd theory decontextualizes crowd incidents and explains behaviour entirely in terms o...
Crowd behaviour and collective action are integral to historical and political developments; they ar...
The challenge for a psychology of crowds and collective behavior is to explain how large numbers of ...
This paper aims to extend the social identity approach to crowd behaviour (Reicher, 1984, 1987) in o...
Recent studies suggest that crowd conflict needs to be understood as an interaction between the crow...
This article explores the origins and ideology of classical crowd psychology, a body of theory refle...
Classical theories of crowd behaviour view crowd conflict as deriving from the pathology of the crow...
Social psychological research suggests that where police hold a theoretical view of the crowd in lin...
Theoretical perspectives that give primacy to ideological or structural determinism have dominated c...
This research was funded by a grant to John Drury, Clifford Stott and Steve Reicher from the Economi...
Theoretical perspectives that give primacy to ideological or structural determinism have dominated c...
Research on patterns of crowd violence across diverse events (including urban riots, protests, and f...
This paper uses recent developments in crowd psychology as the basis for developing new guidelines f...