Fr. 39.90

The Psychology of System Change and Resistance to Change - A New Psychology of Intergroup Relations

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 31.08.2025

Description

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"For students, scholars, policy makers, and community members: understand social change, resistance, conflict, stagnation, and transformation, mapped with psychological levers accessible to everyone"--

List of contents










Introduction and overview; Part I. Intergroup Relations and Group Processes: 1. Intergroup relations and processes: what they are and why they matter; 2. Creating and resisting change as disadvantaged groups; 3. How advantaged groups create, perpetuate and grow their advantage; 4. Ideologies of system justification and system change, and how advantaged group members become allies in change; 5. How norms change: processes of conformity, dissent and innovation; Part II. The New Psychology of Intergroup Relations: 6. Intergroup relations in the world ecological and environmental context; 7. Interconnected resilience and resistance: how systems resist change; 8. Societies as ecosystems: the psychology of factions and subgroups; 9. Temporal cycles and the psychology of time; 10. Beyond linear change: from shocks and disruption to inflection points and emergence; 10. Leaders, artists, innovators: the psychologies of history and imagination; 11. Conclusions, reflections and an agenda for the psychology of transformative change.

About the author

Winnifred R. Louis is a Professor in Psychology at the University of Queensland. Her research examines how social change occurs, and how identity and norms influence decision-making. She has published over 150 papers studying this broad topic in contexts from collective action and political violence to environmental choices and health.Gi Kunchana Chonu is a senior advisor, a researcher, and a lecturer in psychology at James Cook University, Singapore. She completed a Ph.D. in social psychology at the University of Queensland, Australia. Her research focuses on social identity, group transitions, mental well-being, and teaching and learning in higher education.Kiara Minto is a research fellow at the University of Queensland, Poche Centre for Indigenous Health. Her published research focuses on responses to child sexual abuse and partner abuse, sexual consent, and sexual health. Her current work prioritises fostering improved social and emotional health related to sex and relationships.Susilo Wibisono is a post-doctoral researcher in the Social Change Lab at the University of Queensland. He has published research on the relationship of religious identity and collective action, and currently is examining the influence of religiosity in environmental action.

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