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The Psychology of Revolution

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The article was published on 1968-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 9 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Jacobin & Nationalism.

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Horizontal Inequalities and Ethnonationalist Civil War: A Global Comparison

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that horizontal inequalities between politically relevant ethnic groups and states at large can promote ethnonationalist conflict, and they introduce a new spatial method that combines their newly geocoded data on ethnic groups' settlement areas with spatial wealth estimates.
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Cognitive functioning and sociopolitical ideology revisited

TL;DR: The results showed no index convergence for the concepts of cognitive complexity and cognitive flexibility, although general construct validity was found for the cognitive assessments instruments used as discussed by the authors, and they also revealed that four dimensions of sociopolitical ideology (general conservatism, racism, sexual repression, and authoritarian aggression) showed weak but statistically reliable relationships to cognitive flexibility and cognitive complexity from one cognitive assessment instrument.
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Political sophistication and political deviance: A structural equation examination of context theory.

TL;DR: This article used linear measurement and structural equation models to test the plausibility of various causal models dealing with the relations among indexes of political sophistication, self-confidence, print media usage, racism, and political deviance.

Advertising, public relations and social marketing: shaping behaviour towards sustainable consumption

TL;DR: Muratovski, G. et al. as mentioned in this paper presented an approach for advertising, public relations and social marketing to shaping behaviour towards sustainable consumption in the built environment, focusing on sustainable design and behaviour in the building environment.
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The Paradox of Explosive and Gradual Policy Change in Political Revolutionary Times

TL;DR: The authors quantitatively analyzed political revolutions that culminated in the 20th century and found that short-term political revolutionary activity and the establishment of new policy regimes were few in number, while most successful political revolutionary activities along with new policy regime were long-term while some political revolutions were not successful.