Results 221 to 230 of about 43,313 (271)
Political Psychology: Deterrence and Conflict
Ned Lebow was an undergraduate student at the University of Chicago during the most serious crises of the Cold War: Berlin (1958–59 and 1961) and the Cuban missile crisis (1962). His lifelong interest in deterrence, crisis management and the prevention of war began at that time.
Janice Gross Stein
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Juvenile Delinquency and the Psychology of General Deterrence
The study was concerned with the relevance of the judicial concept of general deterrence of juvenile delinquency. A comparison of attitudes of high-school boys, in areas of low and high delinquency, towards the likelihood of apprehension and the painfulness of punishment for criminal offences, and of the boys' factual knowledge of judicial punishment ...
J. Kraus
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For too long, nuclear deterrence theorists have remained apart from the revolution in the life sciences, and particularly evolutionary psychology, which has fundamentally changed the scientific understanding of the human mind. As a result of advances in evolutionary psychology, we now know that how the brain interprets actions and makes decisions is ...
Bradley A. Thayer
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The psychology of deterrence explains why group membership matters for third-party punishment
Abstract Humans regularly intervene in others' conflicts as third-parties. This has been studied using the third-party punishment game: A third-party can pay a cost to punish another player (the "dictator") who treated someone else poorly. Because the game is anonymous and one-shot, punishers are thought to have no strategic reasons to intervene ...
Andrew W. Delton, Max M. Krasnow
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Book Review: Psychology and Deterrence
Thomas W. Milburn
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Social Psychology of Deterrence
Michael Maccoby
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Beyond just deserts and deterrence: An evolutionary psychology of punishment and rehabilitation
Recent studies indicate that punishment is driven by just deserts motives rather than deterrence motives. In the just deserts perspective, punishment is based on the seriousness of the crime, and rehabilitative alternatives to punishment are only expected to be considered when the seriousness is low.
Petersen, Michael Bang; id_orcid 0000-0002-6782-5635
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PREVENTIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND DETERRENCE OF JUVENILE DELINQUENCY ABROAD: HISTORY AND MODERNITY
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The Psychology of Deterrence and the Chances of Education for Peace
Hans Nicklas, Änne Ostermann
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