Produktbild: The Psychology of Prosocial Behavior

The Psychology of Prosocial Behavior Group Processes, Intergroup Relations, and Helping

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

14.08.2009

Herausgeber

Stefan Stürmer + weitere

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

432

Maße (L/B/H)

22,6/15,3/2,8 cm

Gewicht

667 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4051-7880-8

Beschreibung

Rezension

"This book is essential reading for anybody who is interested in prosocial behaviour, or in applying social identity processes to relevant real-world situations." ( Psychologist , January 2010)

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

14.08.2009

Herausgeber

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Seitenzahl

432

Maße (L/B/H)

22,6/15,3/2,8 cm

Gewicht

667 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4051-7880-8

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  • Produktbild: The Psychology of Prosocial Behavior
  • List of Contributors

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction:

    The Psychological Study of Group Processes and Intergroup Relations in Prosocial Behavior: Past, Present, Future: Stefan Stürmer (FernUniversität Hagen) and Mark Snyder (University of Minnesota).

    Part I: Motivations for Helping In-Group and Out-Group Members:

    1. The Tribal Instinct Hypothesis: Evolution and the Social Psychology of Intergroup Relations: Mark van Vugt (University of Kent at Canterbury) and Justin H. Park (University of Groningen, The Netherlands).

    2. Helping "Us" versus "Them": Towards a Group-Level Theory of Helping and Altruism Within and Across Group Boundaries: Stefan Stürmer (FernUniversität Hagen) and Mark Snyder (University of Minnesota).

    3. Stigmas and Prosocial Behavior: Are People Reluctant to Help Stigmatized Persons?: John B. Pryor (Illinois State University), Glenn D. Reeder (Illinois State University), Andrew E. Monroe (University of Oregon), and Arati Patel (Illinois State University).

    4. The Strategic Side of Out-Group Helping: Esther van Leeuwen (Free University Amsterdam) and Susanne Täuber (Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena).

    Part II: Consequences of Giving or Receiving Help in the Context of Groups:

    5. Discrimination Against Out-Group Members in Helping Situations: Donald A. Saucier (Kansas State University), Jessica L. McManus (Kansas State University), and Sara J. Smith (Kansas State University).

    6. Receiving Help: Consequences for the Recipient: Samer Halabi (Zefat Academic College) and Arie Nadler (Tel Aviv University).

    7. Turning to Others in Times of Change: Social Identity and Coping with Stress: Jolanda Jetten (University of Queensland/University of Exeter), S. Alexander Haslam (University of Exeter), Aarti Iyer (University of Queensland), and Catherine Haslam (University of Exeter).

    8. Volunteering Across the Life Span: Doing Well by Doing Good: Jane Allyn Piliavin (Professor Emerita, University of Wisconsin-Madison).

    Part III: Intervention Strategies: Targeting Individuals, Groups, and Organizations:

    9. Perspective Taking and Intergroup Helping: Mark H. Davis (Eckerd College) and Angela T. Maitner (University of Kent).

    10. Recategorization and Prosocial Behavior: Common In-Group Identity and a Dual Identity: John F. Dovidio (Yale University), Samuel L. Gaertner (University of Delaware), Nurit Shnabel (Yale University), Tamar Saguy (University of Connecticut), and James Johnson (University of North Carolina).

    11. Groups, Identities, and Bystander Behavior: How Group Processes Can Be Used to Promote Helping: Mark Levine (Lancaster University) and Clare Cassidy (deceased, formerly University of St. Andrews).

    12. Influences of Psychological Sense of Community on Voluntary Helping and Prosocial Action: Allen M. Omoto (Claremont Graduate University) and Mark Snyder (University of Minnesota).

    13. Empowering the Volunteer Organization: What Volunteer Organizations Can Do to Recruit, Content, and Retain Volunteers: Naomi Ellemers (Leiden University) and Edwin J. Boezeman (Leiden University).

    Part IV: The Broader Picture: Political and Societal Implications:

    14. Interpersonal and Intergroup Helping Relations as Power Relations: Implications for Real-World Helping: Arie Nadler (Tel Aviv University).

    15. Beyond Help: A Social Psychology of Collective Solidarity and Social Cohesion: Stephen Reicher (University of St. Andrews) and S. Alexander Haslam (University of Exeter).

    16. Cross-Group Helping: Perspectives on Why and Why Not: Stephen C. Wright (Simon Fraser University) and Norann T. Richard (Simon Fraser University).

    17. Helping Disadvantaged Out-Groups Challenge Unjust Inequality: The Role of Group-Based Emotions: Aarti Iyer (University of Queensland) and Colin Wayne Leach (University of Connecticut).

    Bibliography.

    Author Index.

    Subject Index.