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CONTENTS: Preface. Kees van den Bos, Stephen W. Gilliland, Dirk D.
Steiner, and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Part I: Developing Theories of
Fairness Motivation. Wanting is Believing: Understanding
Psychological Processes in Organizational Justice by Examining
Perceptions of Fairness. Steven L. Blader and D. Ramona Bobocel.
The Battle Between Self-Interest and Fairness: Evidence from
Ultimatum, Dictator, and Delta Games. Eric van Dijk and Ann
Tenbrunsel. Images of Justice: Development of Justice Integration
Theory. Stephen W. Gilliland and Layne Paddock. Interpersonal and
Informational Justice: Identifying the Differential Antecedents of
Interactional Justice Behaviors. Suzanne S. Masterson, Zinta S.
Byrne, and Hua Mao. Part II: Applying Theories to Managerial
Decisions. An Accessible Identity Approach to Understanding
Fairness in Organizational Settings. Linda J. Skitka and Jesus
Bravo. Self-Regulatory Identity Theory and Reactions Toward
Fairness Enhancing Organizational Policies. Karl Aquino, Americus
Reed II, Marcus M. Stewart, and Debra L. Shapiro. Why Managers
Don't Always do the Right Thing When Delivering Bad News: The Roles
of Empathy, Self-esteem, and Moral Development in Interactional
Fairness. David L. Patient and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Corporate
Champions: Coming to the Defense of Organizations. Carol T. Kulik.
Part III: Commentary. Some Observations and Critical Thoughts About
the Present State of Justice Theory and Research. Gerold Mikula.
Information on Contributing Authors.
The Fair Process Effect aims to shed light on why there are so many
instances of distrust, polarization, and conspiracy thinking in our
world and what we can do about this. The book focuses on the fair
process effect as a mechanism that may help to start overcoming
these important issues of societal discontent. This is a positive
effect that people exhibit when they have been treated in genuinely
fair and just ways by fellow human beings and societal authorities.
Current insights presented in the book aid the understanding of why
people may experience discontent, distrust, and disillusionment.
Furthermore, these insights can be used to start countering
exaggerated levels of distrust, heightened polarization, and
unfounded conspiracy thinking. To this end, Van den Bos develops a
coherent and modern account of the fair process effect, targeted at
understanding and managing these pertinent issues.
The subject of this book is estimating parameters of expectation
models of statistical observations. The book describes the most
important aspects of the subject for applied scientists and
engineers. This group of users is often not aware of estimators
other than least squares. Therefore one purpose of this book is to
show that statistical parameter estimation has much more to offer
than least squares estimation alone. In the approach of this book,
knowledge of the distribution of the observations is involved in
the choice of estimators. A further advantage of the chosen
approach is that it unifies the underlying theory and reduces it to
a relatively small collection of coherent, generally applicable
principles and notions.
Social psychology attempts to understand, explain, predict and,
when needed, change people's thoughts, feelings and behaviours. For
a relatively young discipline it has already made great strides
toward this awe-inspiring goal. Pioneers such as Lewin, Asch,
Kelley and Festinger began groundwork in the 1940s and 1950s, but
it was only in the late 1960s that social psychology came of age.
Since then it has blossomed, both in investigating the basics of
the discipline and in applying the insights from fundamental social
psychology to different fields related to the area. This volume is
devoted to the development of understanding in the field of social
psychology over the last four decades, focusing on both basic and
applied social psychology. Contributions are gathered under five
main areas: attitudes and attitude change; social cognition and
emotions; interpersonal and group processes; health behavior; and
bereavement and coping. These five domains not only illustrate the
scope of social psychology, but also pay tribute to one of the key
figures in modern social psychology, Wolfgang Stroebe. Remarkably,
he has made significant contributions across all five of these
areas, and his research achievements exemplify the progress,
prospects and problems faced by modern social psychology over the
last 40 years. This volume includes contributions from some of the
most distinguished names in the field, and all authors provide an
overview or critical look at their specific area of expertise,
tracing historical developments where appropriate. The Scope of
Social Psychology provides a broad-ranging, illustrative review of
the field of modern social psychology.
Social psychology attempts to understand, explain, predict and,
when needed, change people's thoughts, feelings and behaviours. For
a relatively young discipline it has already made great strides
toward this awe-inspiring goal. Pioneers such as Lewin, Asch,
Kelley and Festinger began groundwork in the 1940s and 1950s, but
it was only in the late 1960s that social psychology came of age.
Since then it has blossomed, both in investigating the basics of
the discipline and in applying the insights from fundamental social
psychology to different fields related to the area. This volume is
devoted to the development of understanding in the field of social
psychology over the last four decades, focusing on both basic and
applied social psychology.
Contributions are gathered under five main areas: attitudes and
attitude change; social cognition and emotions; interpersonal and
group processes; health behavior; and bereavement and coping. These
five domains not only illustrate the scope of social psychology,
but also pay tribute to one of the key figures in modern social
psychology, Wolfgang Stroebe. Remarkably, he has made significant
contributions across all five of these areas, and his research
achievements exemplify the progress, prospects and problems faced
by modern social psychology over the last 40 years.
This volume includes contributions from some of the most
distinguished names in the field, and all authors provide an
overview or critical look at their specific area of expertise,
tracing historical developments where appropriate. The Scope of
Social Psychology provides a broad-ranging, illustrative review of
the field of modern social psychology.
This book covers research on biopsychological aspects of dyslexia
reflects on psycholinguistic aspects of dyslexia offers reflections
on dyslexia treatment research in general. It points out that in
some dyslexics it is not sufficient to treat word identification
difficulties alone.
The Fair Process Effect aims to shed light on why there are so many
instances of distrust, polarization, and conspiracy thinking in our
world and what we can do about this. The book focuses on the fair
process effect as a mechanism that may help to start overcoming
these important issues of societal discontent. This is a positive
effect that people exhibit when they have been treated in genuinely
fair and just ways by fellow human beings and societal authorities.
Current insights presented in the book aid the understanding of why
people may experience discontent, distrust, and disillusionment.
Furthermore, these insights can be used to start countering
exaggerated levels of distrust, heightened polarization, and
unfounded conspiracy thinking. To this end, Van den Bos develops a
coherent and modern account of the fair process effect, targeted at
understanding and managing these pertinent issues.
This Festschrift, dedicated to Frits W. Vaandrager on the occasion
of his 60th birthday, contains papers written by many of his
closest collaborators. Frits has been a Professor of Informatics
for Technical Applications at Radboud University Nijmegen since
1995, where his research focuses on formal methods, concurrency
theory, verification, model checking, and automata learning. The
volume contains contributions of colleagues, Ph.D. students, and
researchers with whom Frits has collaborated and inspired,
reflecting a wide spectrum of scientific interests, and
demonstrating successful work at the highest levels of both theory
and practice.
In Why People Radicalize, Kees van den Bos argues that if we want
to truly understand radicalization and prevent, attenuate, and
fight violent extremism and terrorism, we must pay attention to
what is driving the radicalization process. This implies that we
should systematically analyze how radicalizing persons interpret
the world. For example, perceptions that certain situations are
fundamentally unfair and hence need to be changed are among the
core issues that drive Muslim, right-wing, and left-wing
radicalization. Furthermore, experiences and perceptions of
unfairness and injustice can tempt those who struggle with
self-control to break the law and engage in violent extremist and
terrorist behavior. Why People Radicalize is among the first
attempts to provide a systematic, integrative, and in-depth
analysis of the psychology of unfairness judgments and the ways
these judgments impact on various radicalization processes.
Discussing several conceptual and practical implications that
follow from this line of reasoning, the book emphasizes the role of
careful scientific thought and the notion of taking individuals
seriously, as judgments of unfairness are not merely perceptions.
They feel genuine to the persons forming the judgments. This volume
discusses in detail how these radicalization processes can develop
and what components are of pivotal relevance in these processes.
Accessible for scientists, professionals, and practitioners, the
book explains how uncertainty and insufficient self-corrections
influence this process. Finally, the book delineates future
research issues on radicalization, extremism, and terrorism and
applies the analysis to appropriate legal contexts, making the book
relevant for policy and decision makers, among others.
When going for a drink with her boyfriend's sister, Ryana, an
attractive girl, realising it's no ordinary pub, but a brothel, she
runs away. The owner, Harry Trimboli wants her and caught her, but
she escapes to her boyfriend Richard who had just passed his violin
examination. As Richard is playing with the Symphony Orchestra,
Ryana watches him on television and excitedly phones her brother
Nicholas in New York when there's a knock on the door calling fl
owers. When she sees it's Harry, she screams as he drugs her and
takes her to an old house he just bought. Nicholas still on the
phone alerts police who are there when Richard arrives home to fi
nd out Ryanna has been kidnapped, and blaming himself he smashes
his violin.
THE LAST BLACK CROSS delves deep into a true account of how SS Nazi
officers heap vicious brutality on a young German medical student
and other male and female inmates until the Russian army liberates
prisoners near the end of the conflict. The story reaches climaxes
in two parts, with subtitles THE ASHES OF AUSCHWITZ potraying
unbelievable atrocities in this camp notorius as an expermination
centre, with Jewish men, women and children the main targets; and
the second part, JUDGE JURY and EXECUTIONER, enthralling readers as
they follow how the student, now Doctor Peter Helms, extracts
revenge thirty years later on SS officers responsible for the
annihilation of thousands of innocent Jewish people using beatings,
shootings, and gassing them to death before taking them to the
dreaded crematoriums
CONTENTS: Preface. Kees van den Bos, Stephen W. Gilliland, Dirk D.
Steiner, and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Part I: Developing Theories of
Fairness Motivation. Wanting is Believing: Understanding
Psychological Processes in Organizational Justice by Examining
Perceptions of Fairness. Steven L. Blader and D. Ramona Bobocel.
The Battle Between Self-Interest and Fairness: Evidence from
Ultimatum, Dictator, and Delta Games. Eric van Dijk and Ann
Tenbrunsel. Images of Justice: Development of Justice Integration
Theory. Stephen W. Gilliland and Layne Paddock. Interpersonal and
Informational Justice: Identifying the Differential Antecedents of
Interactional Justice Behaviors. Suzanne S. Masterson, Zinta S.
Byrne, and Hua Mao. Part II: Applying Theories to Managerial
Decisions. An Accessible Identity Approach to Understanding
Fairness in Organizational Settings. Linda J. Skitka and Jesus
Bravo. Self-Regulatory Identity Theory and Reactions Toward
Fairness Enhancing Organizational Policies. Karl Aquino, Americus
Reed II, Marcus M. Stewart, and Debra L. Shapiro. Why Managers
Don't Always do the Right Thing When Delivering Bad News: The Roles
of Empathy, Self-esteem, and Moral Development in Interactional
Fairness. David L. Patient and Daniel P. Skarlicki. Corporate
Champions: Coming to the Defense of Organizations. Carol T. Kulik.
Part III: Commentary. Some Observations and Critical Thoughts About
the Present State of Justice Theory and Research. Gerold Mikula.
Information on Contributing Authors.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Position Of The Roode En Witte Roos In The Saga Of King
Richard III.; Issue 5 Of University Of Wisconsin Studies In
Language And Literature; Issue 5 Of Studies In Language And
Literature; University Of Wisconsin Lambert van den Bos Oscar James
Campbell University of Wisconsin, 1919 Great Britain
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Position Of The Roode En Witte Roos In The Saga Of King
Richard III.; Issue 5 Of University Of Wisconsin Studies In
Language And Literature; Issue 5 Of Studies In Language And
Literature; University Of Wisconsin Lambert van den Bos Oscar James
Campbell University of Wisconsin, 1919 Great Britain
This Book Is In Dutch. Due to the very old age and scarcity of this
book, many of the pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of
the original text.
This Book Is In Dutch. Due to the very old age and scarcity of this
book, many of the pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of
the original text.
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