Part I: Psychology and Social Justice: Historical, Theoretical, and
Conceptual Foundations
Chapter 1: Social Psychology and Social Justice: Critical
Principles and Perspectives for the Twenty-First Century
Phillip L. Hammack
Chapter 2: Social Justice Theory and Practice: Fostering Inclusion
in Exclusionary Contexts
Susan Opotow
Part II: Critical Ontologies, Paradigms, and Methods
Chapter 3: Reconsidering Citizenship Models and the Case for
Cultural Citizenship: Implications for a Social Psychology of
Social Justice
Regina Langhout and Jesica Fernández
Chapter 4: Narrative Approaches within a Social Psychology of
Social Justice: The Potential Utility of Narrative Evidence
David M. Frost
Part III: Race, Ethnicity, Inequality
Chapter 5: Extending the Social Psychology of Racism and Moral
Exclusion: A Framework for Critical Analysis
Cristian Tileaga
Chapter 6: The Ongoing Colonization of North American Indigenous
People: Using Social Psychological Theories to Promote Social
Justice
Stephanie Fryberg, Rebecca Covarrubias, and Jacob A. Burack
Chapter 7: Disjunctive: Social Justice, Black Identity, and the
Normality of Black People
William E. Cross, Jr.
Chapter 8: Culture, Psychology, and Social Justice: Toward a More
Critical Psychology of Asians and Asian Americans
Sumie Okazaki
Chapter 9: Intersectional Understandings of Inequality
Aída Hurtado
Part IV: Gender, Sexuality, Inequality
Chapter 10: "Who is Tossing Whom into the Current?" A Social
Justice Perspective on Gender and Well-Being
Abigail J. Stewart and Alyssa N. Zucker
Chapter 11: Transnational Feminism in Psychology: Women's Human
Rights, Liberation and Social Justice
Shelly Grabe
Chapter 12: Benevolent Heterosexism and the "Less-than-Queer"
Citizen Subject
Darren Langdridge
Part V: Class, Poverty, Inequality
Chapter 13: Of "Takers" and "Makers": A Social Psychological
Analysis of Class and Classism
Heather E. Bullock and Harmony A. Reppond
Chapter 14: Social Class Oppression as Social Exclusion: A
Relational Perspective
Amelia Dean Walker and Laura Smith
Part VI: Globalization, Conflict, Inequality
Chapter 15: Colonization, Decolonization, and Power: Ruptures and
Critical Junctures Out of Dominance
James H. Liu and Felicia Pratto
Chapter 16: Social Psychology and Social Justice: Citizenship and
Migrant Identity in the Post 9/11 Era
Sunil Bhatia
Chapter 17: Social Justice in Multicultural Europe: A Social
Psychological Perspective
Xenia Chryssochoou
Chapter 18: Positioning Theory and Social Justice
Zachary Warren and Fathali M. Moghaddam
Chapter 19: "In the Minds of Men": Social Representations of War
and Military Intervention
J. Christopher Cohrs and Emma O'Dwyer
Part VII: Intervention, Advocacy, Social Policy
Chapter 20: Intergroup Contact in Settings of Protracted
Ethnopolitical Conflict
Ifat Maoz
Chapter 21: Intergroup Contact and the Struggle for Social
Justice
Kevin Durrheim and John Dixon
Chapter 22: Intergroup Dialogue: Education for Social Justice
Biren (Ratnesh) A. Nagda, Patricia Gurin, and Jaclyn Rodríguez
Chapter 23: Setting the Record "Straight": Communicating Findings
from Social Science Research on Sexual Orientation to the
Courts
Gregory M. Herek
Part VIII: Concluding Perspectives
Chapter 24: Bear Left: The Critical Psychology Project in Revolting
Times
Michelle Fine
Chapter 25: Social Psychology and Social Justice: Dilemmas,
Dynamics, and Destinies
Ken Gergen
Phillip L. Hammack is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Politics, Culture & Identity Lab at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Trained as an interdisciplinary social scientist at the University of Chicago, he uses multiple methods to study the lived experience of social injustice and the relationship between self and society. His current research examines sexual and gender identity diversity in social and political context.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |