6 edition of Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War found in the catalog.
Published
December 13, 1990 by Oxford University Press, USA .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Contributions | Philip E. Tetlock (Editor), Jo L. Husbands (Editor), Robert Jervis (Editor), Paul C. Stern (Editor), Charles Tilly (Editor) |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Number of Pages | 384 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL7386662M |
ISBN 10 | 0195057686 |
ISBN 10 | 9780195057683 |
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Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War assesses current knowledge to create a basis for new intellectual approaches to the subject of international security that are conceptually rigorous, theoretically eclectic, and methodologically self-conscious.
Leading scholars review specific behavioral and social phenomena and processes that may be critical Format: Paperback. Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War book. Read reviews from world’s largest community for readers. There is a broad global consensus on the imperative to 4/5(4).
Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War book. Read reviews from world’s largest community for readers. A collection of essays that reviews current knowledge a /5(4).
The second volume of Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War addresses the potential causes of nuclear war within the context of this changing political landscape. As in the first volume of this series, leading scholars review specific behavioral and social phenomena and processes that may be critical in determining war and peace--how foreign policy Format: Paperback.
Get this from a library. Behavior, society, and nuclear war. [Philip E Tetlock; National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Contributions of Behavioral and Social Science to the Prevention of Nuclear War.; National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on.
BOOK REVIEW Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War, volumes I and II. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, and By Philip E. Tetlock, Jo L. Hus-bands, Robert Jervis, Paul Stem, and Charles Tilly, eds.
These volumes are the fruit of the National Research Council's decision in to create a committee to address the risks of. Free 2-day shipping. Buy Behavior, Society, & Nuclear War: Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War: Volume I (Paperback) at ps:// Scopri Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War: Volume II (Behavior, Society, & Nuclear War) () di unknown: spedizione gratuita per i clienti Prime e per ordini a partire da 29€ spediti da :// Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War assesses current knowledge to create a basis for new intellectual approaches to the subject of international security that are conceptually rigorous, theoretically eclectic, and methodologically Klappentext All people wish to avoid nuclear war, but this fact provides little guidance for policy.
One reason is a lack of understanding of how a nuclear war might come about or how one could be prevented; much of what is offered as expert knowledge cannot be defended as more than educated opinion.
Behavior, Society, and Nuclear War assesses current knowledge to create a basis Public Communication and Behavior, Volume 2, is devoted to the study of communicatory behavior that has a public or social character.
More concretely, it encompasses research and theory designated as ""within a range of disciplines and fields—advertising, child development, education, journalism, political science, sociology, and wherever else such scholarly activity occurs including, of Psychological aspects of nuclear war.
[James A Thompson; British Psychological Society,] British Psychological Society,] war --Conclusions --Psychology's contribution to international conflict resolution --Psychological effects of crisis behavior --Historical background --Crisis prevention --Theory into practice --New approaches to Home Military War Essay- The consequences of nuclear war on US society War Essay- The consequences of nuclear war on US society Janu TFD Military 0.
The B isn't getting any younger--but its mission hasn't changed. Find out how aircrews are preparing for a day no one wants to see :// Gromyko, an expert in African affairs, addressed such issues as co-author of a recent book, ''New Thinking in the Nuclear Age,'' which Western sources said sold more thancopies in the Abstract.
Human aggression entails a complex set of behaviors that vary markedly in structure, content, context, and consequences. An angry feeling, a thought of revenge, jostling and “horse-play,” teasing and derogation, fighting over a contested object, bullying and sadistic actions, murder, and the killing of others in the context of a revolutionary struggle or a conflict between.