International Society of Political Psychology Annual
Conference,
Eden Hall, Lund University Lund, Sweden
July 15-18, 2004
The Political Psychology of Hegemony and Resistance
The events of September 11, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and their
aftermath continue to affect the political situation in the world. The
role of the US as a hegemonic power brings into sharp focus the political
psychology of hegemony through the exercise of power over politics, media
and discourse. At the same time we are seeing increasing contestation of
such hegemony among both Western and non-Western societies, as witnessed
through terrorist activities, popular resistance, nationalist/religious
politics, cultural diversity and through the growing importance of the
politics of recognition. Submissions that address any aspect of these
themes, as well as those which address the full range of theory and
research in political psychology are welcomed.
FINAL UPDATE
(ALL FOLLOWING CHANGES WILL BE POSTED ONSITE)
07.07.04
Conference Program
Tuesday July 13:
Executive Committee M Tegenérs Matsalar Conference Room: 2nd Floor
Wednesday July 14:
Governing Council Meeting | 9:00 a.m - 4:00 p.m.
Lunch 12:00 p.m.- Kulturen Restaurant
Dinner, 7:00 p.m.- Fellini Conference Room: 2nd Floor
Workshop II: Advice for Junior Scholars on the Publishing Process
(Please see Conference and Registration Information for details)
9:00am-11:00 am | $15.00 Room E131
Workshop I: Europe and its Boundaries
(Please see Conference and Registration Information for details)
1:00pm-5:00pm | $15.00 Room E131
Pre-conference tour: Castle Tour of Skåne (BUS LEAVES FROM GRAND HOTEL)
(Please see Conference and Registration Information)
8:00am-4:00pm | $65.00
Pre-conference reception at Kronborg's Castle (Hamlet's castle),
Helsingör
(Please see Conference Information and Registration for details)
BUS LEAVES AT 5:OO P.M. AT GRAND HOTEL 7:00 pm | $20.00
Lecture by Lars-Håkan Svensson, Department of English, Lund University,
on the Political Psychology of Hamlet
Thursday July 15: 9.00 a.m. - 5.45 p.m. Conference Program
Lunch Plenary I: The Alexander George Award Lecture
1:00 p.m.-1:45 p.m.
Room E116
Recipient: James Gibson, Washington University, St Louis, USA
Amanda Gouws, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa
Enigmas of Intolerance: Fifty Years After Stouffer's Communism,
Conformity and Civil Liberties
Opening Reception: Main University building (Please see Conference and Registration information for details) 7:00 p.m. | $13.00
Introduction speech by Professor Christer Jönsson, Department of Political
Science, Lund University
Friday July 16:Conference Program 9.00 a.m. - 5.30 p.m.
Lunch Plenary II: Sanford Lecture
1:00 p.m.-1:45 p.m. Room E161
Ervin Staub, University of
Massachusetts at Amherst Preventing renewed violence: healing,
reconciliation and forgiveness after genocide, mass killing and
intractable conflict.
Spouse conference tour of Österlen (BUS LEAVES FROM GRAND HOTEL)
(Please see Conference and Registration Information for details)
9.00 a.m. - 6.00 p.m. | $65.00
Junior Scholar Committee Dinner | OK Bar 7:00 p.m.
Saturday July 17: Conference Program 9.00 a.m. - 5.45 p.m.
Lunch Plenary III: Presidential Adress 1:00 p.m.-1:45 p.m. E116
ISPP President, Richard Ned Lebow,Dartmouth College, USA If Mozart Had Died at Your Age: Psychologic versus Statistical Inference
ISPP Business Meeting 6.00 p.m.
Room E131
ISPP Junior Scholar Hour & Journal Raffle , Grand Hotel Fountain,
Lund
(Please see Conference and Registration Information for details)
7:00 p.m. SEE RAFFLE DETAILS
Annual Awards Banquet, Grand Hotel Hall, Lund (Please see Conference and Registration Information for details) 8.00 p.m. | $45.00/$35.00
Sunday July 18: Conference Program 9.00 a.m. - 5.45 p.m.
Lunch Meeting: Former Presidents, Lundia Hotel Restaurant 1:00 p.m.
Closing Reception, Svaneholms Castle, Lund (Please see Conference and Registration Information for details) 7.00
Monday July 19
Post-conference tour of Copenhagen and surrounding areas (BUS LEAVES FROM GRAND HOTEL)
(Please see Conference and Registration Information for details)
$75.00
Thursday, July 15, 9:00 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.
Panel 1.1 Current International Research in Integrative
Complexity
Panel 1.2 Leadership, Communication, and Politics
Panel 1.3 Memory and Historiography
Panel 1.4 Ethnic Conflict and Crowd Behavior
Panel 1:5 Group-Focused Enmity, Perceived Threat and
Prejudice
Panel 1:6 Roundtable: Careers in Political Psychology
Thursday, July 15, 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Panel 2:1 Terrorism
Panel 2:2 Roundtable: Building Networks for The
Psychological Study of Leaders and Leadership
Panel 2:3 Political Attitudes and Behavior of Students
Panel 2:4 Religion, Ethics and the Role of the Researcher in
Identity-Based Conflicts
Panel 2:5 The Dual Process Model: Social Dominance Orientation
and Right-wing Authoritarianism
Panel 2:6 Hegemony and Resistance, Part I
Thursday, July 15, 2:00 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Panel 3:1 Roundtable:Understanding Ethnopolitical Conflict: Where Do We Go From Here?
Panel 3:2 Leaders and Elite Belief Systems
Panel 3:3 Partisanship and Ideology
Panel 3:4 Roundtable: The Politics of Difference:
Expanding our Knowledge of the Psychology Surrounding our Treatment of
Others, from Altruism to Genocide
Panel 3:5 Subgroup and Superordinate Identities in Intergroup
Conflict
Panel 3:6 Hegemony and Resistance, Part II
Thursday, July 15, 4:00 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Panel 4:1 Ethos in the Israeli-Jewish Society: Evolvement and Change
Panel 4:2 The Psychology of U.S. Presidential Leadership
Panel 4:3 Political Orientations
Panel 4:4 Suicide Bombers and Terrorist Groups
Panel 4:5 The Political Psychology of Intergroup Relations:
Hate, Violence, and Genocide
Panel 4:6 Roundtable: The Future of Identity
Friday, July 16, 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Symposium I: Globalization, Racism and Xenophobia
Symposium II: American Hegemony and Resistance: Nationalism,
Terrorism and War
Friday, July 16, 9:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Interactive Poster Session
Friday, July 16, 9:00 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.
Panel 5:1 Evaluating Peace Education
Panel 5:2 Roundtable: Transboundary Environmental Crisis
Management: Challenges and Lessons Learned
Panel 5:3 Political Communication, Part I
Panel 5:4 Psychological and Economic Dimensions of Racial
Stereotypes and Racial Policy Positions
Panel 5:5 Hegemony and Resistance, Part III -The Cases of Iraq
and Russia
Friday, July 16, 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Panel 6:1 Peace and Conflict
Panel 6:2 Leadership and the Institutional Landscape
Panel 6:3 Political Communication, Part II
Panel 6:4 Roundtable: Academic Success: Mentorship and
Personal Dimensions
Panel 6:5 Social Identity, Religiosi4:4 Perspective Taking and Attribution in Political
Communication
Panel 14:5 The European Union: Migration and Changing
Identities
Sunday, July 18, 2:00 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Panel 15:1 Women's Bodies, Women's Lives and Gendered Public
Policy
Panel 15:2 Hegemony and Resistance, Part IV
Panel 15:3 Roundtable: Eminent Scholar Panel Honoring
Fred Greenstein
Panel 15:4 Political Language and Behavior
Panel 15:5 Categorization and Scapegoating of Others
Panel 15.6 Political Dissatisfaction, National Decision-Making and Civic Engagement
Sunday, July 18, 4:00 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Panel 16:1 Deliberative Democracy
Panel 16:2 Rational and Non-Rational Factors in Political
Decision-Making
Panel 16:3 Biotechnology and Public Opinion
Panel 16:5 Stress Management of Austrian and British
Politicians
Conflict Analysis and Conflict resolution
Panel 1.1 Current International Research in Integrative
Complexity
Panel 2:1 Terrorism
Panel 3:1 Roundtable, Understanding Ethnopolitical Conflict: Where Do We Go From Here?
Panel 4:1 Ethos of Conflict in the Israeli-Jewish Society:
Evolvement and Change
Panel 5:1 Evaluating Peace Education
Panel 6:1 Peace and Conflict
Panel 7:1 Negotiation
Panel 8:1 Arab-Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Panel 9:1 Educating for Peace in the 21st Century:
Research and Practice
Panel 10:1 Conflict Resolution
Panel 11:1 Perception and Decision-making
Political Decision Making
Panel 14:2 Political Decision-Making, Coalition Politics and
Policy Change
Panel 16:2 Rational and Non-Rational Factors in Political
Decision-Making
Political Socialization
Panel 1.4 Ethnic Conflict and Crowd Behavior
Panel 2:4 Religion, Ethics and the Role of the Researcher in
Identity-Based Conflicts
Panel 4:4 Suicide Bombers and Terrorist Groups
Panel 7:4 International Conflict
Panel 8:4 Civic Education
Panel 9:4 Political Socialization, Identity and Nationalism
Panel 10:4 Identity, Social Solidarity and Social
Responsibility
Panel 11:4 National Identity and Xenophobia
Panel 12:3 Migrants and their Adaptation
Gender and Political Psychology
Panel 13:1 New Research on Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) the
Development of Modes to Fight the Practice.
Panel 14:1 Women, Liberation and Sexual Harassment
Panel 15:1 Women's Bodies, Women's Lives and Gendered Public
Policy
Political Cognition, Public Opinion and Voting Behavior
Panel 2:3 Political Attitudes and Behavior of Students
Panel 3:3 Partisanship and Ideology
Panel 4:3 Political Orientations
Panel 5:3 Political Communication, Part I
Panel 6:3 Political Communication, Part II
Panel 14:3 Political Cognition and Voting
Panel 8:3 Political Campaigns
Panel 9:3 Public Opinion: The Iraq Conflict
Panel 10:3 Public Opinion
/U> Roundtable: The Politics of Difference: Expanding our
Knowledge of the Psychology Surrounding our Treatment of Others, from
Altruism to Genocide
Panel 3.6 Hegemony and Resistance, Part II
Panel 4.6 Roundtable: The Future of Identity
Panel 5.5 Hegemony and Resistance, Part III-The Cases of Iraq
and Russia
Panel 6.4 Roundtable: Academic Success: Mentorship and Personal
Dimensions
Panel 7.3 Advancing Healing and Reconciliation in Rwanda
Panel 11.3 Roundtable: Force and Values: European and American
Perspectives
Panel 12.5 Anti-Americanism in Europe and Elsewhere, Peaceful
and Violent
Panel 13.3 Coping with Political Trauma
Panel 15.2 Hegemony and Resistance, Part IV
Panel 14.4 Perspective Taking and Attribution in Political
Communications
Panel 15.3 Roundtable: Eminent Scholar Panel Honoring Fred
Greenstein
Panel 15.6 Political Dissatisfaction, National Decision-Making and Civic Engagement
Panel 16.1 Deliberative Democracy
Panel 16.4 Patriotism, Populism and Corroption
Panel 16.5 Stress Management of Austrian and British
Politicians
Tuesday, July 13, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Executive Council Meeting
Wednesday, July 14, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Governing Council Meeting
Thursday, July 15, 8:00 a.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Conference Registration
Book Exhibit and Paper Sale
Thursday, July 15, 9:00 a.m. - 10.45
Panel 1.1 Current International Research in Integrative
Complexity
Room E129Chair: Peter Suedfeld
Integrative Complexity in a Face-to-Face Peace Talk: An Analysis of
Reciprocity among Participants José Liht Sigall,
Universidad Iberoamericana
Variations in Cognitive Complexity During the Israeli-Palestinian Peace
Process Jacques Lecomte, Université Paris 10,
France
Are Lies More Complex than the Truth? Lucian Gideon
Conway, III & Felix Thoemmes
Integrative Complexity, Metaphor Power and Modality in the Rhetoric of
Dyab Abou Jahjah, leader of the Arab European League
(AEL) Christ'l De Landtsheer, University of Antwerp,
Belgium
Discussant: David G. Winter,
University of Michigan, USA
Panel 1.2 Leadership, Communication, and Politics
Room E234
Chair: Bruce Dayton
Elite Interaction as the Key to Sustainable
Peace Julia Jennstål, Uppsala University,
Sweden
China and SARS: An Analysis of Western Media Coverage of a New Pandemic
in the East Eva-Karin Olsson, CRiSMART/Swedish
National Defence College, Stockholm Stephanie Buus,
CRiSMART/Swedish National Defence College, Stockholm
Russian Crisis Communications and Media Management Under
Putin Greg Simons, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Discussant: Bruce Dayton
Panel 1.3 Memory and Historiography
Room E233
Chair: Jacques Szaluta, United States
Merchant Marine Acad Small World of Terrorism Research: Mapping the Socio-cognitive
Structure of Research on Terrorism Walter L Giusti,
University of Melbourne, Australia Jeromy Anglim,
University of Melbourne, Australia
Jujitsu Politics: Terrorism and Response to
Terrorism Clark McCauley, University of Pennsylvania
Discussant: Arthur Kendall, Capital Area Social Psychological Association, USA
Panel 2.2 Roundtable: Building Networks for The Psychological
Study of Leaders and Leadership
Room E234
Chair: Fred Greenstein, Princeton
University, USA
Yael Aronoff, Hamilton College, USA: Israeli prime ministers
Barbara Farnham, Columbia University, USA: Franklin D.
Roosevelt
Robert Gilbert, Northeastern University, USA: clinical
depression in Calvin Coolidge
Betty Glad, University of South Carolina, USA: the political
psychology of despots
Fred I. Greenstein, Princeton University, USA: American
presidential leadership
Elizabeth Marvick, independent scholar: psychological study of
US Founders
James Walter, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia:
Australian prime minister.
David Winter, University of Michigan, USA: quantitative content
analysis of the motivation of political leaders (tbc)
Panel 2.3 Political Attitudes and Behavior of Students
Room E129
Chair: April Kelly-Woessner,
Elizabethtown College
The Price of Rights: Exploring the Role of Individualism, Collectivism,
Rights, and Obligations in Students' Reported Political
Behavior Angela Bos, University of Minnesota,
USA Ian Williamson, University of Minnesota, Twin
Cities, USA John L. Sullivan, University of
Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Marti Hope Gonzales,
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Patricia G.
Avery, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA
Determining Attitudes Toward War: Scale Development and
Analysis Erin Goforth, University of New Hampshire,
USA
The Psychological Impact of Stressful Events in Sri Lankan
Students Shannon McCaslin Rodrigo, University of
California, San Francisco, USA Charles R. Marmar,
University of California, San Francisco, USA Piyanjali
de Zoysa, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka Lisa D.
Butler, Stanford University, USA Cherryl
Koopman, Stanford University, USA
Discussant: April Kelly-Woessner,
Elizabethtown College, USA
Panel 2.4 Religion, Ethics and the Role of the Researcher in
Identity-Based Conflicts
Room E128
Chair: Catarina Kinnvall
Women as Symbols in Religious Discourse(s): The Hindu-Muslim Conflict
in India Catarina Kinnvall, Lund University,
Sweden Sidsel Hansson, Lund University, Sweden
Forgiveness and Reconciliation: The Religious
Dimension Yehudith Auerbach, Israel
Collective Self-Healing
Rafi Nets, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Positioning Oneself as a Researcher in a Politically Volatile
Situation Chaya Po Daniel Nohrstedt, Uppsala University,
Sweden
Bolt from the Blue or Avoidable Failure? Revisiting September 11 and
the Origins of Strategic Surprise Charles Parker,
Uppsala University, Sweden Eric Stern, Uppsala
University, Sweden
Beliefs as Causal Mechanisms and the Political Psychology of
Leadership Mark Schafer, Louisiana State University,
USA Stephen G. Walker, Arizona State University, USA
Discussant: Betty Glad, University of
South Carolina, USA
Panel 3.3 Partisanship and Ideology
Room E129 Chair: Christopher Federico, University of Minnesota, USA
Explaining Electoral Volatility: Predispositions' Strength, Political
Sophistication, and Strategic Choices Romain Lachat,
University of Zurich, Switzerland
The Psychology of Partisanship: Being, Thinking, Feeling, and
Doing Larry M. Bartels, Princeton University,
USA
Ideological Polarization and Ideological Sophistication in the United
States Kathleen Knight, Barnard College, Columbia
University, USA Robert S. Erikson, Columbia
University, USA
Expertise and ideological structure: Moderating effects of the need to
evaluate Christopher Federico, University of
Minnesota, USA
Panel 3.4 Roundtable: The Politics of Difference: Expanding our
Knowledge of the Psychology Surrounding our Treatment of Others, from
Altruism to Genocide
Room E128 Chair: Kristen Monroe, Center for the
Scientific Study of Ethics and Morality, University of California, Irvine,
USA
Jim Glass, University of Maryland, USA
Catarina Kinnvall, Lund University, Sweden
Janusz Reykowski, The Warsaw School of Social Psychology,
Poland
Susanna Smolenska, The Warsaw School of Social Psychology,
Poland
Ervin Staub, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA
Panel 3.5 Subgroup and Superordinate Identities in Intergroup
Conflict
Room E118 Chair: Shana Levin, Claremont McKenna
College, USA
National and Ethnic Identity, Group Status and the Nature of the
State Jim Sidanius, University of California at Los
Angeles, USA Christian Staerkle, University of
California at Los Angeles, USA Eva Green, University
of California at Los Angeles, USA Ludwin Molina,
University of California at Los Angeles, USA
Identity, Perceptions of Discrimination, and Policy: The Causes and
Consequences of Reactive Ethnicity among Latinos Debbie
Schildkraut, Oberlin College, USA
Re-Categorization Strategies and Political
Groups Annarita Celeste Pugliese, University of
Bari, Italy
Carmençita Serino, University of Bari,
Italy
Political Intergroup Relations in Chile: the Role of Identity and
Contact
Roberto González, Pontificia Universidad
Católica de Chile
Jorge Manzi, Pontificia
Universidad Católica de Chile José Luis Saiz,
Universidad de La Frontera, Chile Pablo de Tezanos,
p; J. Christopher Cohrs, Friedrich-Alexander
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Jürgen
Maes, University of Trier, Germany Sven
Kielmann, University of Trier, Germany Barbara
Moschner, University of Oldenburg, Germany
Influence of the Belief in a Just World on Anti-Poverty Policy
Preferences Lauren D. Appelbaum, Fairleigh Dickinson
University
Panel 4.4 Suicide Bombers and Terrorist Groups
Room E128 Chair: Meredith Reid Sarkees, Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, USA
The Suicide Terrorist: Personal Evolution and Social
Development Linda Valenty, California Polytechnic
State University, USA
The Palestinian Suicide Bombers -Typology of Suicide
Terrorists Shaul Kimhi, Tel-Hai Academic College,
Israel
The Female Suicide Bomber: A Cross Cultural Psychoanalytic
Study Nancy Kobrin, Psychoanalyst, Minnesota,
USA
Discussant: Meredith Reid Sarkees, Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, USA
Panel 4.5 The Political Psychology of Intergroup Relations: Hate,
Violence, and Genocide
Room E118 Chair: James Waller, Whitworth
College, USA
Crossing the Threshold: When Does Inter-Communal Violence Lead to
Genocide? Martha Cottam, Washington State
University, USA Michael Infranco, Washington State
University, USA
Hate and Its Relation to Genocide Clark Richard
McCauley, Bryn Mawr College and Solomon Asch Center for the Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass
Killing James Waller, Whitworth College, USA
Panel 4.6 Roundtable: The Future of Identity
Room E131 Chair: Ken Hoover, Kentucky State
University
Catarina Kinnvall, Lund University, Sweden
Jane Kroger, University of Tromso, Norway
Kristen Monroe, University of California, Irvine
Friday, July 16, 8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Conference Registration
Book Exhibit and Paper Sale
Friday, July 16, 9:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Symposium I: Globalization, Racism and Xenophobia
Conference Room: 2nd Floor Chair: Martin Hall
9:00 a.m.-10:45: Paper Presentations
The Myths of Globalization
Martin Hall, Lund University, Sweden
Politics of deligitimizing terrorists Daniel Bar-Tal, Tel Aviv University, Israel The Detrimental Dynamics of Deligitimization in Intractable Conflicts: The israeli-Palestinian Case
Neta Oren, Tel Aviv University, Israel
'Islamophobia' as a Rhetorical Resource in the Construction of Muslim Identity Nick Hopkins, University of Dundee, United Kingdom
The Role of Women in Fundamentalist Discourse Catarina Kinnvall, Lund University, Sweden
Muslim Voices in Canada Paul Nesbitt-Larking, Huron University College, Canada
Stereotypes about Immigrants in Swedish and Danish Local Media Bo Petersson, Lund University, Sweden
>, University of Ulster,
Northern Ireland
Discussant: March Howard Ross, Bryn
Mawr College
Panel 5.2 Roundtable: Transboundary Environmental Crisis
Management: Challenges and Lessons Learned
Room E234 Chair: Margaret Hermann, Syracuse
University, USA
Bruce Dayton, Syracuse University, USA
Agnes Gereben Schaefer, Princeton University, USA
Asthildur Elva Bernhardsdottir
Debora L. VanNijnatten, Wilfrid Laurier University
Jesper Grönvall, CRISMART, Swedish National Defense College
Panel 5.3 Political Communication, Part I
Room E129 Chair: Francis A. Beer
Motivation, Internet Political News Usage, And Political
Knowledge Justin W. Holmes, University of
Minnesota
Gender stereotyping of political candidates: An experimental study of
political communication Toril Aalberg, Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, Norway Anders
Todal Jenssen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology,
Norway
Discussant: Francis A. Beer
Panel 5.4 Psychological and Economic Dimensions of Racial Stereotypes
and Racial Policy Positions
Room E128 Chair: Christopher M. Federico,
University of Minnesota, USA
Ideology and the Structure of Racial Stereotypes
Christopher M. Federico, University of Minnesota,
USA
Effects of Empathy and Group Affinity on Race Related Policy
Positions Thomas Craemer, State University of New
York at Stony Brook, USA
External Attacks and Internal Cohesion: Impact of September 11 on
Domestic Interethnic Relations David O. Sears,
University of California at Los Angeles, USA Ludwin E.
Molina, University of California at Los Angeles,
USA Sabrina Pagano, University of California at Los
Angeles, USA
The Economic Dimensions of Group Conflict: Assessing How the Slavery
Reparations Debate Influences Public Support for Civil
Rights Matthew Woessner, Penn State University at
Harrisburg, USA April Kelly-Woessner, Elizabethtown
College, USA
Discussant: Antonio Brown, Loyola
Marymount University, USA
Panel 5.5 Hegemony and Resistance, Part III - The Cases of Iraq and
Russia
Room E118 Chair: Peter Offu, University of Malaya, Malaysia
The Boundaries of Terror and the Challenge of Impact Assessment: The
Iraqi Experience
Peter Offu, University of Malaya,
Malaysia
The Plight of Children in Post War Iraq Amer
Hosin, London Metropolitan University, United Kingdom
Russian Hegemony in Dagestan
Robert Bruce Ware,
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, USA
Friday, July 16, 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Panel 6.1 Peace and Conflict
Room E233 Chair: Gerd Meyer, University of Tübingen, Germany
Chiapas (Mexico): Cultural Hegemony and Political Resistance
José M. Infante, Univerceptability of Atrocity
Jonathan T. Drummond, United States Air Force
Directed Energy Bioeffects Division
Very Religious Christians, Prejudice and Outgroup
Altruism Pearl Oliner, Humboldt State University,
USA
The Globalization of Antisemitism: Durban, Porto Alegre, Geneva,
Mumbai Shimon Samuels, Simon Wiesenthal Center,
Paris, France
Friday, July 16, 1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.
Lunch Plenary II: The Sanford Award Address
Room E116 Preventing Renewed Violence: Healing, reconciliation and forgiveness
after genocide, mass killing and intractable conflict
Ervin Staub, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA
The address will focus on psychological changes, including
psychological wounds, of survivors, perpetrators and bystanders as such
changes are necessary to understand in order to effectively promote
reconciliation. It will also discuss the role of healing in
reconciliation, and avenues to healing, and consider approaches to
reconciliation, including truth, justice, and significant contact. The
focus is on understanding the roots of violence between groups and the
creation of a shared (in contrast to separate and conflicting) history. In
this regard the address also discusses the possibility, conditions
required for, and role of forgiveness.
Friday, July 16, 2 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Panel 7.1 Negotiation
Room E233 Chair: Christer Jönsson, Lund University, Sweden
International negotiation: Cognitive, emotional and communicative
aspects Mauro Galluccio, European Commission,
Brussels, Belgium
Transforming intractable conflicts: How Jerusalem became
negotiable Cecilia Albin, Uppsala University,
Sweden
Inside/Outside of "Spoiling" in Peace Negotiations Karin
Aggestam, Lund University, Sweden
Discussant: Christer Jönsson, Lund University, Sweden
Panel 7.2 Understanding Leaders from Other Cultures
Room E234 Chair: Meredith Reid Sarkees, Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame, USA
Can Tyrants be Deterred?
Betty Glad, University
of South Carolina
Understanding Middle Eastern Leaders: A Practitioner's Perspective
Ambassador Nathaniel Howell (to be confirmed)
Discussants: Greg Saathoff, University of
Virginia Margaret G. Hermann, Syracuse University
Panel 7.3 Advancing Healing and Reconciliation in Rwanda
Room E129 Chair: Laurie Anne Pearlman, Trauma
Research, Education and Training Institute, Connecticut, USA
A Community-Based Approach to Trauma Healing Laurie Anne
Pearlman, Trauma Research, Education Institute, Connecticut,
USA
A Comparison of a Reconciliation Approach Developed for Rwanda with
Conflict Resolution Approaches: Possible
Integration Ervin Staub,University of Massachusetts
at Amherst, USA
Growing Up After Genocide: Children in the Holocaust and in
Rwanda Suzanne Kaplan,Stockholm University,
Sweden
Panel 7.4 International Conflict
Room E128 Chair: David Rankin
ONT color=#0033cc>Discussant: Karin Aggestam, Lund University, Sweden
Panel 8.2 The Psychology of Cooperation
Room E234 Chair: Richard Ned Lebow, Dartmouth
College, USA
Large Scale Decentralized Cooperation over the Internet in Open Source
Communities Steven Weber, UC Berkeley, USA
Unstrategic Reasoning and the Psychology of
Cooperation Richard Ned Lebow, Dartmouth College,
USA
Functionalism or Familiarity Breeding Contempt? Identity Development,
Music and the Politics of the Mizrahi Jews in
Israel Donald Sylvan, Ohio State University,
USA Amy Horowitz, Ohio State University, USA
Discussant: Shawn Rosenberg,
University of California, Irvine, USA
Panel 8.3 Political Campaigns
Room E129 Chair: Jay Barth, Hendrix College, USA
Giving the People What They Want: The Importance of Synchronicity
Between Desired Political Communication and Campaign Activity in Shaping
Voter Turnout Jay Barth, Hendrix College,
USA E. Terrence Jones, University of Missouri-St.
Louis, USA Martha Kropf, University of
Missouri-Kansas City, USA Janine Parry, University
of Arkansas, USA
The Effect of Issue Advocacy Advertising on Voters' Cognition and
Voting Behavior Soontae An, Kansas State University,
USA Hyun Seung Jin, Kansas State University, USA
Cognitive Style and Political Learning During the 2000 U.S.
Presidential Campaign Thomas M. Holbrook, University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA
Panel 8.4 Civic Education
Room E128 Chair: Helen Haste
Roots of Civic Attitudes: The role of family in youth
socialization Allison Harell, McGill University,
Canada Dietland Stolle, McGill University,
Canada
Human Rights: Knowledge and attitudes - a representative study in
Germany Gert Sommer, Marburg University, Germany
Democratic deliberation as civil education: Does it make better
citizens? Donald Searing, University of North
Carolina, USA) Pamela Johnston Conover, University
of North Carolina, USA Fred Solt, Rice University,
USA Ivor Crewe, Essex University, United Kingdom
Identity, efficacy, positioning and narrative: The route to
citizenship Helen Haste, Bath University, United
Kingdom
Discussant: Allison Harell, McGill
University, Canada
Panel 8.5 The Concept of Authoritarianism and its Relation to Other
Concepts
Room E118 Chair: Andreas Hadjar, University of
Technology, Chemnitz, Germany
Authoritarianism, Social Dominance Orientation and Xenophobic
Prejudices, Wolfgang Frindte,
Friedrich-Schiller-University, Germany Silke
Zachariae, Friedrich-Schiller-University, Germany
Authoritarianism and social dominance as belief systems predicting
nationalism, patriotism and internationalism, Bernd
Six, Martin-Luther-University Halle- Wittenberg,
Germany Uwe Woa Cumner,
Political environment and motivated reasoning: The case of the Iraqi
conflict
James Kuklinksi, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
Panel 9.4 Political Socialization, Identity and Nationalism
Room E128 Chair: Kristina Jönsson, Lund
University, Sweden
Northern Ireland after the Belfast Agreement: Ulster Unionism's last
stand James White McAuley, University of
Huddersfield, United Kingdom
Waving the Flag: National Symbolism, Patriotism and Political
Engagement Robert T. Schatz, Metropolitan State
College of Denver, USA Howard Lavine, State
University of New York at Stony Brook, USA
The Future of Ukraine: "Messiah", "Big Don", "Gray Cardinal" or "Papa"?
Towards the Discourse of Political Identity in the
Country Christ'l De Landtsheer, University of
Antwerp, Belgium Natalya Krasnoboka, University of
Antwerp, Belgium
Regional Integration versus National Identity Building in Southeast
Asia
Kristina Jönsson, Lund University, Sweden
Discussant: Anders Hellström, Lund
University, Sweden
Panel 9.5 The Meaning of Authoritarianism in Societies in
Transition
Room E118 Chair: Sam McFarland, Western Kentucky University, USA
Authoritarian vs. Democratic Values in Russia after transformation:
back to the USSR?, Lioudmila Presniakova, Public
Opinion Foundation, Russia
Transformation ofauthoritarianism in the process of democratic
transition in Russia, Helen Shestopal, Moscow State
University, Russia
Dictatorial Authoritarianism and Democratic Authority,
Maryse Touboul, George Washington University,
USA
Discussant: Sam McFarland, Western
Kentucky University, USA
Panel 9.6 Identity Politics and Ideologies
Room E131 Chair: Bernard Fournier,
Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Psychology and Identity Politics: Workers Mental
Health Neuza Guareschi, Pontifical Catholic
University, Porto Alegre, Brasil
The Individual Psychology of Ideologies and Belief
Systems James M. Youakim, Jefferson Medical College,
USA
A Socio-Political Analysis of Trust in Eastern and Central
Europe Mirona A. Gheorghiu, University of Sussex,
United Kingdom
Discussant: Bernard Fournier,
Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Saturday, July 17, 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Panel 10.1 Conflict Resolution
Room E233 Chair: Annica Kronsell, Lund University, Sweden
Gacaca: Tradition and Conflict Resolution in Post-Genocide
Rwanda Philip Frankel, University of the
Witwatersrand
Understanding Local Conflicts to Solve Ethnic and Religious Tensions in
Contemporary Indonesia
Diah Asitadani, University of
Geneva, Switzerland
Discussant: Annica Kronsell, Lund University, Sweden
Panel 10.2 Public Reactions to Terror
Globalization: Change and Challenge of "Political
Identity" Christine Kulke, Technical University
Berlin, Germany
The Mundane as Tactical Resistance Paul
Nesbitt-Larking, Huron University College, Canada
'Homo Zappiens' -A European-Jewish Way of Life in the Era of
Globalization Lars Dencik, Roskilde University,
Denmark
Double Identity: National Figure and Global Icon - Marlene
Dietrich Helga Geyer Ryan, University of Amsterdam,
The Netherlands
Discussant: Inga R. Gammel,
University of Helsinki, Finland
Saturday, July 17, 1 p.m.
Lunch Plenary III: Presidential Address
Room E116 "If Mozart Had Died at Your Age: Psycho-logic vs. the Laws of
Statistical Inference."
Richard Ned Lebow, Dartmouth College, USA
Saturday, July 17, 2:00 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Panel 11.1 Perception and Decision-making
Room E233 Chair: Agnieszka Golec, Polish Academy of Science, Poland
Germany's Post-Cold War Foreign Military Intervention
Decision-making Jeffrey Martinson, Ohio State
University, USA
From "Munich" to the War: Changing Perceptions of Hitler's
Words Brooke Sweet, University of Michigan, USA
David Winter, University of Michigan, USA
Explaining Conflicts over Natural Resources with Political
Psychology Steen Norstrom, University of Copenhagen,
Denmark
Entitativity, conflict schema and conflict attitudes: moderating role
of motivated cognition Agnieszka Golec, Polish
Academy of Sciences, Poland
Panel 11.2 Public and Elite Opinion on War
Room E128 Chair: Francis A. Beer, University of
Colorado at Boulder, USA
Empathy with Palestinians vs. Israelis: Examining Media Coverage and
Bias Donald A. Sylvan, Ohio State University, USA
Nathan Toronto, Ohio State University, USA
Globalizing Hegemony and Resistance: Words and Images of Terror and
Protest Francis A. Beer, University of Colorado at
Boulder, USA G. Robert Boynton, University of Iowa,
USA
Elite Perceptions of European Security
1890's-1930s Rasmus Bertelsen, Cambridge University,
United Kingdom
Discussant: Christ'l de Landtsheer,
University of Antwerp, Belgium
Panel 11.3 Roundtable: Force and Values: European and American
Perspectives
Co-sponsored by Women in International Security
Room E129 Chair: Pamela Aall, U.S. Institute of Peace, USA Martha Crenshaw, Wesleyan
University, USA
Alyson J.K. Bailes, Stockholm International Peace Institute,
Sweden
Cecilia Albin, Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, Uppsala
University, Sweden
Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen, Danish Institute for International
Studies, Denmark
Panel 11.4 National Identity and Xenophobia
Room E234 Chair: Eva Green, University of
California, Los Angeles, USA
National attachment and xovdiv, Bulgaria
Larissa Titarenko, University of
Minsk, Belarus
Numeracy About Minority Populations: Americans' Estimations of Local
Gay Population Size Marvin Overby, University of
Missouri, USA Jay Barth, Hendrix College, USA
Panel 12.3 Migrants and their Adaptation
Room E129
Chair: Meral Gezici, Philipps-Universitat,
Marburg, Germany
Public policies and social vulnerability possibilities for adolescents
from poor communities Neuza Guareschi, Pontifical
Catholic University, Porto Alegre, Brazil
Quality in health: Difficulties due to ethnic, cultural and religious
diversity Sandra Feliciano, Portugal
Do young immigrants take part in political organisations and
activities? Meral Gezici, Philipps-Universitat,
Marburg, Germany
Discussant: Anders Hellstrom,
Lund University, Sweden
Panel 12.4 Authoritarianism: Different Concepts, National and
Cross-National Studies
Room E128 Chair: David G. Winter, University of
Michigan, USA
Comparing the Authoritarianism Measures of Altemeyer and
Feldman Elizabeth Suhay, University of Michigan,
USA
Authoritarianism and Viewing the Iraq War as
"Just" David G. Winter: University of Michigan,
USA
Changes in Authoritarian Attitudes of Austrian Adolescents 1980 -
2003 Christian Hummer, University of Vienna,
Austria
Authoritarianism and Anti-Semitism: a Comparison of Attitudes in Border
Regions of Germany and Poland Angela Kindervater,
International University Bremen, Germany
Discussant: David G. Winter,
University of Michigan, USA
Panel 12.5 Anti-Americanism in Europe and Elsewhere, Peaceful and
Violent
Room E118 Chair: Martha Crenshaw, Wesleyan
University, USA
The European Radical Right and anti-Americanism Roger
Eatwell, University of Bath, United Kingdom
Anti-Americanism, Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism in Western Europe: Is
it a new crisis or an old problem? Leonard Weinberg,
University of Nevada, Reno William Eubank,
University of Nevada, Reno Allen Wilcox, University
of Nevada, Reno
Anti-Western Fanatics or Rational Political Actors? Islamic Organizations who Use Suicide Terrorism
Ami Pedahzur, University of Haifa,
Israel Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa,
Israel
French and German Resistance to US Leadership,
2002/2003 Peter H. Merkl, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Discussant: Martha Crenshaw, Wesleyan
University, USA
Panel 12.6 Roundtable: Crisis Management in China
Room E131 Chair: Dr. Lan Xue, School of Public Policy & Management, SPPM, Tsing Hua University, China
Dr. Zongchao Peng, Vice Director, Public Policy Institute, SPPM, Tsing Hua University, China
Dr. iversity of Siegen,
Germany
Relations between European identity and socio-demographic
characteristics of the inhabitants of Serbia and
Montenegro Mirjana Francesko, University of Novi
Sad Jasmina Kodzopeljic, University of Novi
Sad Vladimir Mihic, University of Novi Sad
Identity Constructions among European Youths and the Acceptance of
Others Daniel Fuss, International University Bremen,
Germany
Discussant: Harlan Koff, Pitzer College, USA
Sunday, July 18, 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m.
Panel 14.1 Women, Liberation and Sexual Harassment
Room E118
Acceptance of the Women's Liberation Movement Across Time and
Generations Roberta Sigel, Rutgers University,
USA Krista Jenkins, Rutgers University
Understanding Social Capital: Generational Differences and
Sociohistorical Context Christa McDermott,
University of Michigan, USA
Panel 14.2 Political Decision-Making, Coalition Politics and Policy
Change
Room E234 Chair: Ilan Fischer, Ben Gurion University, Israel
Dealing with Disagreements in Foreign Policy Decision Groups: The
Effects of Decision Rules and Group Identity in
Experiments Charles F. Hermann, Texas A&M
University, USA Nehemia Geva, Texas A&M
University, USA Belinda Bragg, Texas A&M
University, USA
The Rationality of Cooperation Ilan Fischer, Ben Gurion University, Israel
The Social Psychology of Coalition Politics Juliet
Kaarbo, University of Kansas, USA
Policy Change and Extreme Ecological Events: Urban Floods in a
Comparative Context Eric Lindquist, Texas A&M
University, USA Udo Becker, Technical University,
Dresden, Germany Thomas Jakob, Department of
Economic Affairs, City of Dresden, Germany
Panel 14.3 Political Cognition and Voting
Room E131 Chair: James Kuklinski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
The value of heuristics and information in voter
choices Dennis Chong, Northwestern University
Group ambivalence and electoral decision
making Howard Lavine, State University of New York
at Stony Brook
On the Predominance of Emotional and Rational Predictors of Right-Wing
Extremist Vote: The Case of Israel Sivan
Hirsch-Hoefler, Haifa University, Israel
The gender gap in 2000-2002: Volatility from security
concerns Cal Clark, Auburn University,
USA Janet Clark, State University of West Georgia,
USA
Discussant: James Kuklinski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Panel 14.4 Perspective Taking and Attribution in Political
Communication
Room E233 Chair: Anna Blom Kemdal, Stanford
University, USA
Perspective Taking Effects on Discussion, Attributions, and Attitudes
to Immigration Politics Anna Blom Kemdal, Stanford
University, USA
Unexpected Effects and Failures of Attempts to Promote Reconciliation
is-O'brien, Trinity College,
USA M. Mendez-Baldwin, Manhattan College,
USA R. Pelach-Galil, Hebrew University,
Israel
Panel 15.3 Roundtable: Eminent Scholar Panel Honoring Fred
Greenstein
Room E131 Chair: Yael Aronoff
Fred Greenstein, Princeton University, USA
David Winter, University of Michigan, USA
Betty Glad, University of South Carolina, USA
Roberta Sigel, Rutgers University, USA
Barbara Farnham, Columbia University, USA
Panel 15.4 Political Language and Behavior
Room E233 Chair: Willem Botha, Rand Afrikaans University, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Power of Language in a Changing World Willem
Botha, Rand Afrikaans University, Johannesburg, South Africa
Talking Politics in Japan: Slips of the Tongue or Genuine Political
Thoughts? Ofer Feldman, Doshisha University,
Japan
Eliciting Behavior Michael A. Krasner, Queens
College, City University of New York and Taft Institute for Government,
USA
Discussant:Martin Hall, Lund University, Sweden
Panel 15.5 Categorization and Scapegoating of Others
Room E129 Chair: Bo Petersson, Lund University,
Sweden
Roma Rights Versus Roma Wrongs: Examining Europe's Gypsy
Policies Harlan Koff, Pitzer College, USA
Portuguese Lesbigay Movement and Non-Hegemonic
Identities Isabel Menezes, University of Porto,
Portugal
Scapegoat Theory and Repression of Sexuality: The Experience of
'Otherness' Tatiana L. Smolina, Herzen State
Pedagogical University, St. Petersburg, Russia
The Role of the Other in Stateless Nationalism
Scott McIver, Malmö University, Sweden
Discussant: Lisa Strömbom, Lund University, Sweden
Panel 15.6 Political Dissatisfaction, National Decision-Making and Civic Engagement
Room E128
Chair: Dan Henk, Air War College, USA
The Psychology of Political Dissatisfaction Ekiji
Ryuen, Teikyo University, Japan
Environmental Security and National Decision-Making in
Botswana Dan Henk, Air War College, USA
Voting Rate and Civic Engagement in Japan: Why do the Japanese people
go to the polls? Yoshinobu Araki, Musashino
University, Japan
Discussant: Dan Henk, Air War College, USA
Sunday, July 18, 4:00 p.m. -5:45 p.m.
Panel 16.1 Deliberative Democracy
Room E233 Chair: Janusz Reykowski, The Warsaw School of Social Psychology, Poland
The Real World of Deliberation. A Comparative Study of its Favorable Conditions in Legislatures
Andre Baechtiger, University of Bern and Istituto Universitario Europeo (Firenze)
Marco R. Steenbergen, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
Is Deliberative Democracy a Psychologically Feasible Idea?
Janusz Reykowski, The Warsaw School of Social Psychology,
Poland
"An Experimental Study of Competing Models of Democra Andreas Olbrich, University of Vienna,
Austria
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