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HUMAN BEHAVIOUR (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   087828


Becoming Emotional about International Policing: Exploring the Relationship Between Emotions and Policing / Bryn Hughes   Journal Article
Bryn Hughes Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract While emotions are at the core of human behaviour, they have received little attention in conceptions of international policing where only 'rational' behaviour tends to be taken seriously. This blind spot is problematic, inter alia because it leads to an impoverished understanding of what contributes to the successes or failures of peace operations. This article makes a foray into this space, positing that a better understanding of the relationship between emotions (of local and intervening actors alike) and international policing performance could lead to improvements in mission design as well as implementation. The article identifies methods with the capacity to assess performance through the lens of emotion.
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2
ID:   041341


Conflict and harmony in human affairs: a study of cross - pressures and political behavior / Sperlich, Peter W 1971  Book
Sperlich, Peter W Book
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Publication Chicago, Rand Mc Nally and Company, 1971.
Description xii, 256p.
Series American politics research series
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Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
008740150/SPE 008740MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   037400


Human behavior and international politics: contributions from the social-psychological sciences / Singer, J David (ed) 1965  Book
Singer, J David Book
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Publication Chicago, Rand Mc Nally and Company, 1965.
Description xiii, 466p.
Series Rand Mcnally political science series
Key Words World Politics  Human behaviour 
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Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
004142327/SIN 004142MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   041652


Images of man / Rosenthal, Bernard G 1971  Book
Rosenthal, Bernard G Book
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Publication New York, Basic Books Publishers, 1971.
Description xii, 244p.
Key Words Psychology  Human behaviour  Ethnopsycology 
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Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
008321150/ROS 008321MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   057721


Killer species / Wrangham, Richard   Journal Article
Wrangham, Richard Journal Article
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Publication 2004.
Key Words Human behaviour  Killer species 
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6
ID:   057723


Origins of human differences / Bateson, Patrick   Journal Article
Bateson, Patrick Journal Article
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Publication 2004.
Key Words Human behaviour 
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7
ID:   126643


Troublesome spirits: alcohol, excise and extraterritoriality in nineteenth and early twentieth century Siam / Warren, James A   Journal Article
Warren, James A Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Although alcohol has long been a feature of Thai society, historical evidence indicates that excessive drinking on a regular basis is a relatively recent phenomenon. During the nineteenth century, there were significant quantitative and qualitative changes in both alcohol consumption and production in Siam, due largely to the introduction of new alcoholic beverages and methods of distillation by Chinese immigrants and Western entrepreneurs. As public drunkenness became more common, excessive drinking was blamed for an apparent increase in violent crime throughout the kingdom. This paper examines how the Thai government tried to manage the upsurge in drunken behaviour and the obstacles it faced in doing so. Most of these problems stemmed from the limits on the kingdom's fiscal and judicial sovereignty imposed by the unequal treaties it had signed with the Western imperial powers; as such, they are indicative of Siam's semi-colonial status during this period.
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8
ID:   128288


What ought humanists to do? / Miller, Hillis I   Journal Article
Miller, Hillis I Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract I am honored to contribute to this issue of Dcedalus, "What Humanists Do."' Each contributor was asked by guest editor Denis Donoghue to identify a text that has meant much to her or him. then discuss it. This assignment presupposes that humanists spend much of their time interpreting texts and promoting their circulation among their students. readers of their scholarship, and the general public. It is as though we contributors were asked, "Come on now, account for your activities as humanists. Tell us what you do. Tell us why what humanists do contributes to the public good!" I promise further on to give such an accounting for my own work. First, however, I need to make a few preliminary remarks.
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