ISBN13: | 9781032252261 |
ISBN10: | 103225226X |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 282 pages |
Size: | 234x156 mm |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 17 Illustrations, black & white; 17 Line drawings, black & white; 23 Tables, black & white |
700 |
The Political Psychology of Social Unrest in Latin America
GBP 145.00
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The Political Psychology of Social Unrest in Latin America is a unique collection of research and writings by Latin American scholars. It explores the social, psychological, and political factors of the recent turmoil in Latin American countries.
The Political Psychology of Social Unrest in Latin America is a unique collection of research and writings by Latin American scholars. It explores the social, psychological, and political factors of the recent turmoil in Latin American countries.
From the ongoing political crisis in Venezuela, the impeachment demonstrations in Brazil, student movements in Chile, and massive demonstrations in Chile, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, this edited volume analyses the underlying similarities and differences between these events through the lens of diverse research traditions, methods, and researchers. The book examines both actual inequalities and disadvantages as well as the role of perceptions of inequality and injustice. The authors also investigate the role of micro-processes, such as cultural consumption in the family, and the role of social psychological processes in historical Latin American unrest. By utilising leading approaches in social and political psychology and testing these approaches in the context of a very diverse and dynamic non-WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) societies, the authors bring the communities and civilizations less studied by Western social psychologists to the international audience.
Focusing on how social and political processes unfold in different countries and providing insights into the psychological underpinnings of social unrest from a variety of perspectives, this is an essential reading for students and researchers of psychology, social, political, peace and cross-cultural psychology as well as political science and sociology.
1. The Ideological Underpinnings of Distributive Unfairness Evaluations: Evidence from Latin America Between 1997 and 2020 2. Political Cynicism and its relationship with the Approval of Institutions in a context of high salience of corruption in Peru 3. Rethinking the liaisons between social mobilization and political representation in the21st century: a conceptual proposal 4. Trends of Right-Wing Authoritarianism in Brazil before and after the election of Bolsonaro 5. The political participation of Latin American school-age students: resources, political attitudes, and civic learning opportunities 6. Collective action in Chile prior and after the 2019?s social outbreak: the central role of socio-psychological factors in promoting social change 7. Social beliefs and emotional orientations about social protest in ordinary citizens in six cities of Colombia 8. Predictors of individual participation in social protest actions in Ecuador in the period 2018-2021 9. Social Mobilization in Bolivia: Modeling 21f-Protest Motives and Satisfaction With Conflict Results 10. Collective effervescence and positive emotions in the 8M march and its effects on solidarity, efficacy and feminist identity 11. Social unrest in contemporary Ecuador: lessons for psychologists 12. Summary and Conclusions - Vanessa Smith-Castro, David Sirlopú & Huseyin Cakal