The aftermath of genocide: psychological perspectives/
Editors Johanna Ray Vollhardt and Michal Bilewicz
- UK : Wiley-Blackwell, 2013.
- 208 p.
- Journal of social issues, volume 69, no. 1. .
After the genocide: psychological perspectives on victim, bystander, and perpetrator groups / Johanna Ray Vollhardt, Michal Bilewicz -- National narrative and social psychological influences in Turks' denial of the mass killings of Armenians as genocide / Rezarta Bilali -- Moral immemorial: the rarity of self-criticism for previous generations' genocide or mass violence / Colin Wayne Leach, Fouad Bou Zeineddine, and Sabina Cehajic-Clancy -- Thou shall not kill ... your brother: victim-perpetrator cultural closeness and moral disapproval of Polish atrocities against Jews after the Holocaust / Miroslaw Kofta, Patrycja Slawuta -- When the past is far from dead: how ongoing consequences of genocides committed by the ingroup impact collective guilt / Roland Imhoff, Michael J.A. Wohl, and Hans-Peter Erb -- Child survivors of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide and trauma-related affect / Suzanne Kaplan -- Restoring self in community: collective approaches to psychological trauma after genocide / Laurie Anne Pearlman -- The "never again" state of Israel: the emergence of the Holocaust as a core feature of Israeli identity and its four incongruent voices / Yechiel Klar, Noa Schori-Eyal, and Yonat Klar -- "Crime against humanity" or "crime against Jews"? acknowledgment in construals of the Holocaust and its importance for intergroup relations / Johanna Ray Vollhardt -- Reconciliation through the righteous: the narratives of heroic helpers as a fulfillment of emotional needs in Polish?Jewish intergroup contact / Michal Bilewicz and Manana Jaworska -- A world without genocide: prevention, reconciliation, and the creation of peaceful societies / Ervin Staub -- The aftermath of genocide: history as a proximal cause / Peter Glick, Elizabeth Levy Paluck.
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Genocide -- Psychological aspects. Social psychology.