Conflicts over important moral differences can divide communities and trap people in destructive spirals of enmity that become intractable. But these conflicts can also be managed constructively. Two laboratory studies investigating the underlying social–psychological dynamics of more tractable versus intractable moral conflicts are presented, which tested a core proposition derived from a dynamical systems theory of intractable conflict. It portrays more intractable conflicts as those, which have lost the complexity inherent to more constructive social relations and have collapsed into overly simplified, closed patterns of thinking, feeling, and acting that resist change. Employing our Difficult Conversations Lab paradigm in which particip...
Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in viole...
This article focuses on intractable conflicts and how they are transformed. Specific attention is gi...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the social psychological significance of intractability across ...
Conflicts over important moral differences can divide communities and trap people in destructive spi...
Conflicts over important moral differences can divide communities and trap people in destructive spi...
We studied the behavioral and emotional dynamics displayed by two people trying to resolve a conflic...
Protracted ethnopolitical conflicts continue to undermine the security, stability and well being of ...
This short essay looks at several social forces that powerfully affect human behavior, often trumpin...
In this article, the authors present the results of a study in which a diverse variety of experts in...
Conflict is inherently messy, and today those analyzing conflicts are confronted with an incredible ...
Yarn and Jones introduce a biological approach to understanding resistance to apology, forgiveness, ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2014. Major: Psychology. Advisors: Eugene Borg...
Coordinating competing interests can be difficult. Because law regulates human behavior, it is a can...
We know that our thinking is affected by conflict; this applies to groups and nations as much as to ...
Dyads with a depressed and a non-depressed participant (N = 15) and two nondepressed participants (N...
Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in viole...
This article focuses on intractable conflicts and how they are transformed. Specific attention is gi...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the social psychological significance of intractability across ...
Conflicts over important moral differences can divide communities and trap people in destructive spi...
Conflicts over important moral differences can divide communities and trap people in destructive spi...
We studied the behavioral and emotional dynamics displayed by two people trying to resolve a conflic...
Protracted ethnopolitical conflicts continue to undermine the security, stability and well being of ...
This short essay looks at several social forces that powerfully affect human behavior, often trumpin...
In this article, the authors present the results of a study in which a diverse variety of experts in...
Conflict is inherently messy, and today those analyzing conflicts are confronted with an incredible ...
Yarn and Jones introduce a biological approach to understanding resistance to apology, forgiveness, ...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2014. Major: Psychology. Advisors: Eugene Borg...
Coordinating competing interests can be difficult. Because law regulates human behavior, it is a can...
We know that our thinking is affected by conflict; this applies to groups and nations as much as to ...
Dyads with a depressed and a non-depressed participant (N = 15) and two nondepressed participants (N...
Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in viole...
This article focuses on intractable conflicts and how they are transformed. Specific attention is gi...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the social psychological significance of intractability across ...