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MISPERCEPTIONS (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124178


Japan's purchase of disputed islands: fallout and misperception / Kung-wing Au   Journal Article
Kung-wing Au Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Despite numerous channels for communication and abundant supply of information, misperceptions occur in international politics, and the recent interaction between Japan and China over a group of disputed islands is a case in point. Their quarrel has intensified, leading to a sudden deterioration of civil and official ties, with effects felt in the political and economic realms, and repercussions on the overall relationship. Although some would argue that both sides do not have a better choice, their interaction reveals certain misperceptions and therefore other possibilities. This article surveys the actual conditions after Japan's decision to nationalize the disputed islands in 2012, illustrates misperceptions on both sides in their interaction based on those findings, and probes into the possible causes of such misperceptions.
Key Words International Politics  Japan  China  Misperceptions  Dispute Islands 
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2
ID:   148171


Misperceptions of the ‘Muslim Diaspora’ / Silvestri, Sara   Journal Article
Silvestri, Sara Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract “[T]he main religious traditions all share references to journeys and emigration experiences as metaphors for the human condition.”
Key Words Muslim Diaspora  Misperceptions 
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3
ID:   113612


Perceptions and misperceptions: an assessment of Bangladesh-India relations / Vinayaraj, V K   Journal Article
Vinayaraj, V K Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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4
ID:   080900


Pernicious history' as a cause of national misperceptions / Mendeloff, David   Journal Article
Mendeloff, David Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This article examines Russia's response to the 1999 Kosovo crisis in order to evaluate theoretical propositions about the relationship between historical memory and conflict-causing misperceptions. For decades, Russian society consumed, especially through mass education, a particular interpretation of Russia's imperial wars and interventions in the Balkans and its historical relations with Serbia and the West. A comparison of the content of this view to the Russian elite and popular response to the 1999 Kosovo crisis shows how particularly pernicious historical ideas influenced a number of serious misperceptions about Balkan realities and Western motives in 1999. The case reveals that historical memory is more far-reaching than accounted for by traditional theories of misperception. Those theories, when they do incorporate historical memory, ignore or minimize the role of popular historical ideas as independent causes of misperceptions; perceptual distortions result largely from cognitive limitations in the processing of information, hence little can be done to avoid them. This study shows how historical ideas themselves may be a source of misperceptions. This has important policy implications: since historical beliefs are hardly immutable, efforts taken to scrutinize and challenge particularly pernicious interpretations of the past could help avoid conflict-causing perceptual distortions
Key Words NATO  Serbia  Russia  Identity  Historical Memory  Kosovo War 
Misperceptions  Foreign Policy 
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