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Al Ramiah, Ananthi; Hewstone, Miles – American Psychologist, 2013
We propose that intergroup contact provides an effective means by which to reduce, resolve, and prevent conflict of all kinds, including violent conflict. We review the vast literature on the effectiveness of intergroup contact and discuss when and how it reduces prejudice. We also discuss key features of successful interventions, highlighting …
Descriptors: Intergroup Relations, Conflict, Intervention, Prevention
Staub, Ervin – American Psychologist, 2013
The 20th century was a century of genocide and other great violence between groups within societies. Already at the beginning of the 21st century, there have been mass killings, civil wars, violent conflict, and terrorism. This article summarizes influences that tend to lead to intense group violence. It then considers prevention, stressing early…
Descriptors: Peace, Prevention, Conflict Resolution, Death
American Psychologist, 2012
Presents a short biography of the 2012 winner of the American Psychological Association's Award for Distinguished Professional Contributions to Applied Research. Leslie S. Greenberg is an exemplary scientist-practitioner whose pioneering work has significantly altered the landscape of the field of psychotherapy research and practice. His seminal…
Descriptors: Recognition (Achievement), Depression (Psychology), Psychotherapy, Empathy
American Psychologist, 2012
Parenting coordination is a nonadversarial dispute resolution process that is court ordered or agreed on by divorced and separated parents who have an ongoing pattern of high conflict and/or litigation about their children. These guidelines are designed to address the developing area of practice known as parenting coordination. In response to the…
Descriptors: Evidence, Courts, Conflict, Child Rearing
Dweck, Carol S. – American Psychologist, 2012
Debates about human nature often revolve around what is built in. However, the hallmark of human nature is how much of a person's identity is not built in; rather, it is humans' great capacity to adapt, change, and grow. This nature versus nurture debate matters--not only to students of human nature--but to everyone. It matters whether people…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Racial Relations, Race, Foreign Countries
Vasquez, Melba J. T. – American Psychologist, 2012
Much of psychological science and knowledge is significantly relevant to social justice, defined here as the goal to decrease human suffering and to promote human values of equality and justice. A commitment to social justice has evolved as a more important value in the last few decades for psychology, including for the American Psychological…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Ethics, Psychology, Strategic Planning
Lee, Yueh-Ting; Jussim, Lee – American Psychologist, 2010
This article presents the authors' comments on Crisp and Turner's (May-June 2009) research on "imagined intergroup contact" (p. 231). Its goals of reducing prejudice are laudable, especially with a motivation to "prepare people to engage outgroups with an open mind" (p. 231). The method is relatively simple, easy, and…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Imagination, Bias, Social Psychology
Vallacher, Robin R.; Coleman, Peter T.; Nowak, Andrzej; Bui-Wrzosinska, Lan – American Psychologist, 2010
Intractable conflicts are demoralizing. Beyond destabilizing the families, communities, or international regions in which they occur, they tend to perpetuate the very conditions of misery and hate that contributed to them in the first place. Although the common factors and processes associated with intractable conflicts have been identified…
Descriptors: Conflict, Conflict Resolution, Social Problems, Theories
Seligman, Martin E. P. – American Psychologist, 2011
Seligman responds to the comments made about the January 2011 "American Psychologist" "Special Issue on Comprehensive Soldier Fitness" (CSF). Seligman proposed an entire issue of on the topic of CSF to encourage psychologists to come to the aid of our government, and he urges psychologists not to be discouraged by this tactic.…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, War, Well Being, Holistic Approach
Christie, Daniel J.; Tint, Barbara S.; Wagner, Richard V.; Winter, Deborah DuNann – American Psychologist, 2008
Although the literature in peace psychology has been growing rapidly, many American psychologists are unaware of how conflict is resolved and peace is conceptualized and achieved. This article reviews the long history and broadening scope of peace psychology and introduces a model of peace that is useful for organizing the literature. The model…
Descriptors: Peace, Psychology, Conflict Resolution, Intervention
Stokols, Daniel; Misra, Shalini; Runnerstrom, Miryha Gould; Hipp, J. Aaron – American Psychologist, 2009
Recent technological, geophysical, and societal forces have fundamentally altered the structure and functioning of human environments. Prominent among these forces are the rise of the Internet; rapid rates of global environmental change; and widening rifts among different socioeconomic, racial, religious, and ethnic groups. The present article…
Descriptors: Change, Global Approach, Social Change, Computer Simulation
Kelman, Herbert C. – American Psychologist, 2007
The vicissitudes of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process since 1967 are analyzed using attitudes and related concepts where relevant. The 1967 war returned the two peoples' zero-sum conflict around national identity to its origin as a conflict within the land both peoples claim. Gradually, new attitudes evolved regarding the necessity and…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Public Support, Nationalism, Conflict

Kimble, Gregory Adams – American Psychologist, 1999
Examines conflicts resulting from the splintering of psychology as a discipline. Discusses conflict resolution (empiricism versus intuition, analysis versus holism, psychological versus biological causality, and splintering of the discipline). Describes functional behaviorism, suggesting that psychology must be behavioristic to be a science.…
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Conflict Resolution, Intuition, Personality

Coombs, Clyde H. – American Psychologist, 1987
Conflicts occur in the following three situations: (1) when a choice must be made between incompatible goals; (2) when individuals want different things but must settle for the same thing; and (3) when individuals want the same thing but must settle for different things. This article discusses the consequences and difficulties of conflicts.…
Descriptors: Conflict, Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Interpersonal Relationship
Eidelson, Roy J.; Eidelson, Judy I. – American Psychologist, 2004
Responds to the comment by Kamyar Arasteh on the Eidelson and Eidelson article which made an important contribution, at a critical juncture, to the discussion of international conflicts by identifying core dimensions that allow for the systematic examination of the problem. The authors appreciate Arasteh's thought-provoking comments about their…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Conflict Resolution, Conflict, Cognitive Mapping
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