Dear RJ,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am aware of your interests but I have no desire to discuss "my work" in
> this area on, or off, this list. I hope you can appreciate such a desire.
I must say that I find this surprising. There are so few psychologists who work
in this area that I have always found it helpful to maintain contact and share
research/work.
There is a relatively small but very solid group including Marty Seligman, Peter
Suedfeld, and Ervin Staub who regularly maintain communication, share papers,
and are working on the joint initiative by CPA and APA Additionally, this is
an active concern of both the Society for the Study of Peace, Conflict, and
Violence: Peace Psychology (Division 48 of apa - you do not have to be a member
of apa to join - http://moon.pepperdine.edu/~mstimac/Peace-Psychology.html) and
Psychologists for Social Responsibility (PsySR - http://www.rmc.edu/psysr/).
I'll certainly respect that you do not want to communicate your work to others
but I do find it surprising. As psychology is working diligently to create a
new specialty area focussing on ethnopolitical conflict and its ramifications,
we can only benefit from each other's work.
To fellow Tipsters - I would love to hear from anyone who works in this area so
that we can exchange lecture notes/suggestions, syllabi, and course material and
to discuss unique course difficulties and rewards.
Warm regards,
linda
--
linda m. woolf, ph.d.
associate professor - psychology
webster university
main webpage: http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/
Holocaust and genocide studies pages:
http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/holocaust.html
womens' pages: http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/women.html
gerontology pages: http://www.webster.edu/~woolflm/gero.html
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