Clark R - Bryn Mawr College

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Clark Richard McCauley
Curriculum Vitae, January 2013
Psychology Department
Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
Office: (610) 526-5017
FAX: (610) 526-7476
EMAIL:cmccaule@brynmawr.edu
Education
B.S. Providence College, 1965, Biology
M.A. University of Pennsylvania, 1967, Psychology
Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1970, Social Psychology
Bryn Mawr College Appointments
Assistant Professor, Psychology, 1970-1976
Associate Professor, Psychology, 1976-1986
Professor, Psychology, 1986-Present
Other Professional Appointments
Consultant to Section de Communication, Universite de Montreal, 1972-1974.
Editor, Praeger Monograph Series in Psychology, 1975-1976.
Consultant to End Stage Renal Disease Network No. 24 Coordinating Council,
King of Prussia, PA. 1983 -1986.
Consultant to Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, 1983-1998; 2002-present.
Adjunct Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, 1985-present.
Co-Director, Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict, University of Pennsylvania
1998-2007, Bryn Mawr College 2007-present.
Member, Psychosocial Working Group, http://www.forcedmigration.org/psychosocial/working.htm,
2004-2006.
Member, Policy Committee of the International Association of Applied Psychology, and Chair of
the Subcommittee on Ethnopolitical Violence, 2003-2007.
Member, American Psychological Association Task Force on Reaction to Terrorism, 2004-2006.
Lead Investigator, National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (NCSTART), 2005-present.
Editorial Board, Terrorism and Political Violence, 2007-present.
Editorial Board, Peace and Conflict: The Journal of Peace Psychology, 2010-present.
Founding Editor, Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 2007- present.
Undergraduate Courses Taught
Introductory Psychology, Social Psychology. Psychological Measurement and Testing,
Statistics and Experimental Design, Process and Effects of Mass Media Communication,
Cognitive Issues in Personality and Social Psychology, Political Psychology of Group
Identification. Psychology of Genocide, Psychology of Terrorism.
Graduate Courses Taught
Social Psychology, Psychological Measurement and Testing, Research Methods, Psychology of
Genocide, Psychology of Terrorism.
Memberships in Professional Organizations
International Society for Political Psychology, American Psychological Society, American
Psychological Association, International Association of Applied Psychology
Honors and Awards
NSF Graduate Fellowship, 1965-1969
NIMH: MH 31266 RO1, $49,976; 1978-1981;
"Interpersonal Overload in the City."
Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation: $11,560; 1989;
"Psychology of Men in Combat."
American Psychological Association Scientific Conferences Program: $7403;
Stereotype Accuracy Conference, 10-11 June 1994, Bryn Mawr College.
Russell Sage Foundation: $24,928; 1997;
"The use of diversity training in U.S. colleges and universities."
NIMH: MH57731-01 RO3, $24,529, 1998;
"A new measure of minority integration and isolation."
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $120,000, Jan-Dec 1998;
Start-up for Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict at University of
Pennsylvania. (with Paul Rozin, University of Pennsylvania)
NIMH: MH59201-01 R25, $149,000, 1999;
“Mental Health and Ethnopolitical Warfare: A Curriculum.”
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $320,000, Jan 1999 - Dec 2000;
Post-doctoral and pre-doctoral fellowship support for Asch Center.
(with Paul Rozin, University of Pennsylvania)
Anonymous gift and matching grants: $1,500,000, Sep 1999 – Aug 2003;
Fellowship and research support for Asch Center
(with Paul Rozin, University of Pennsylvania)
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $750,000, Mar 2001 - Feb 2004;
Fellowship and Research Support for Asch Center.
(with Paul Rozin, University of Pennsylvania)
NIMH: MH59201-02 R25, $300,000, 2001;
“Mental Health Dimensions of Ethnic Conflict.”
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $300,000, Jan 2002 - Dec 2004;
Forced Migration Institutional Partnership.
(with Paul Rozin, University of Pennsylvania)
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $150,000, Jan 2002 - Dec 2003;
9/11 Aftermath Research Initiative at the Asch Center.
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: $625,000, Jun 2003- Dec 2005;
Fellowship and Research Support for the Asch Center.
James McKeen Cattell Fund, sabbatical award $13,500, 2004-2005;
Time-Sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences (TESS): 8000 respondent-questions, Sep
2006-August 2007; “Grievance, activism, radicalism.” Principal Investigator.
National Science Foundation SGER: $199,893, Nov 2006 – Oct 2008. “SGER: DHS and NSF
Collaboration: Developing Polls to Test Theories of Radicalization and Potential for
Radicalization.” Principal Investigator.
National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START): about
$700,000 for a variety of research projects relating to political radicalization and terrorism,
2004-present.
2
Professional Activities
Consulting Editor for Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1974-76; 1979-1984.
Occasional reviewer for Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, NSF,
Psychological Bulletin, Journal of Social Issues, Psychological Review, European Journal
of Social Psychology, Academic Press, W. W. Norton Publishers, Human Relations, Basic
and Applied Social Psychology, Polity, International Journal of Conflict Management,
American Journal of Public Health, Journal of Research in Personality, Terrorism and
Political Violence, Social Justice Research, American Psychologist, Peace and Conflict.
NSF Minority Graduate Fellowship Panel (Behavioral & Social Sciences A), Feb. 15-16, 1989.
NSF Graduate Fellowship Panel (Psychology), Feb. 6-8, 1990.
Master's Theses and Doctoral Dissertations Supervised
Claire Bourguet
1973, M.A.
Thomas McLellan
1974, M.A.
Kathryn Woods
1974, M.A.
Mary Segal
1981, M.A.; 1983, Ph.D.
Robert Forman
1984, Ph.D.
Wendy Addae
1984, M.A.
Laura Hershey
1985, Ph.D.
Barbara Bremer
1986, Ph.D.
Krishna Thangavelu 1989, Ph.D.
Amy Jaffey
1990, Ph.D. (U. of Penn, co-supervisor with Paul Rozin)
Susan Burggraf
2000, Ph.D
Sophia Moskalenko 2005, Ph.D. (U of Penn, co-supervisor with Paul Rozin)
Scholarly Publications -- Books
McCauley, C., & Stitt, C. (Eds.) (1976). Frontiers of behavior. New York: Praeger.
McCauley, C. (Ed.) (1991). Terrorism research and public policy. London: Frank Cass.
Lee, Y.T., Jussim, L., & McCauley, C. (Eds.) (1995). Stereotype accuracy: Toward an
appreciation of group differences. Washington, D.C.: APA Books.
Lee, Y.T., McCauley, C., & Draguns, J. (Eds.) (1999). Personality and person perception across
cultures. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Lee, Y.T., McCauley, C., Moghaddam, F., & Worchel, S. (Eds.) (2004). The psychology of ethnic
and cultural conflict. Westport, CN: Praeger.
Chirot, C., & McCauley, C. (2006). Why not kill them all? The logic and prevention of mass
political murder. Princeton University Press. Chinese (2007), Swedish (2008), and
Finnish (2008) translations. Paperback edition (Princeton University Press, 2010).
McCauley, C., & Moskalenko, S. (2011). Friction: How radicalization happens to them and us.
New York: Oxford University Press.
.
3
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books
Pepitone, A., McCauley, C., & Hammond, P. (1967). Change in attractiveness of forbidden toys
as a function of severity of threat. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 3, 21-29.
Piliavin, J., Piliavin, I., Loewenton, E., McCauley, C., & Hammond, P. (1969). On observers'
reproductions of dissonance effects: the right answers for the wrong reasons? Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 13, 98-106.
McCauley, C. (1969). Marihuana effects amid great expectations. Science, 165, 204.
McCauley, C., & Graham, N. (1971). The influence of values in risky decision making: An
interpretation. Representative Research in Social Psychology, 2, 3-11.
McCauley, C., Teger, A., & Kogan, N. (1971). Effect of the pretest in the risky-shift paradigm.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 20, 379-381.
McCauley, C., Kogan, N., & Teger, A. (1971). Order effects in answering risk dilemmas for self
and others. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 20, 423-424.
McCauley, C. (1972). Extremity shifts, risk shifts, and attitude shifts after group discussion.
European Journal of Social Psychology, 2, 417-436.
McCauley, C., & Kramer, L. (1972). Strategy differences between group and individual gambling.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 8, 518-527.
McCauley, C., Stitt, C., Woods, K., & Lipton, D. (1973). Group shift to caution at the race track.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 9, 80-86.
[reprinted in C. Mayo & M. LaFrance (Eds.), Evaluating research in social psychology: a guide for
the consumer. Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole, 1977.]
McCauley, C., & Stitt, C. (1973). Reply to Abelson's comment on "Group shift to caution at the
race track. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 9, 522-525.
Grala, C., & McCauley, C. (1976). Counseling truants back to school: the effects of optimistic and
threat appeals combined with supportive instructions. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 23, 166-169.
[abstracted as "A community-based program to reduce high school absenteeism" in H.L. Millman,
C.E. Schaefer & J.J. Colon (Eds.). (1980). Therapies for school behavior problems. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.]
McCauley, C., & Taylor, J. (1976). Is there overload of acquaintances in the city? Environmental
Psychology and Nonverbal Behavior, 1, 41-55.
Newman, J., & McCauley, C. (1977). Eye contact with strangers in city, suburb, and small town.
Environment and Behavior, 9, 547-558.
McCauley, C., & Swann, C. (1978). Female-male differences in sexual fantasy. Journal of
Research in Personality, 12, 76-86.
McCauley, C., Coleman, G., & DeFusco, P. (1978). Commuters' eye-contact with strangers in
city and suburban train stations: evidence of short-term adaptation to interpersonal overload in the city.
Environmental Psychology and Nonverbal Behavior, 2, 215-255.
4
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
McCauley, C., & Stitt, C. (1978). An individual and quantitative measure of stereotypes. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology, 36, 929-940.
McCauley, C., & Jacques, S. (1979). The popularity of conspiracy theories of presidential
assassinations: a Bayesian analysis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37, 637-644.
McCauley, C., Stitt, C., & Segal, M. (1980). Stereotyping: from prejudice to prediction.
Psychological Bulletin, 87, 195-208.
McCauley, C., & Swann, C. (1980). Sex differences in the frequency and functions of fantasies
during sexual activity. Journal of Research in Personality, 14, 400-411.
McCauley, C., & Ciesielski, J. (1982). EEG tests for brain dysfunction: a question of validity.
Science, 217, 81-82.
McCauley, C. (1982). More about thought reform. American Psychologist, 37, 102-103.
McCauley, C. (1982). On saints and propaganda. Journal of Communication, 32, 239.
Johnson, J., McCauley, C., & Copley, J. (1982). The quality of life of hemodialysis and transplant
patients. Kidney International, 22, 286-291.
McCauley, C., Woods, K., Coolidge, C., & Kulick, W. (1983). More aggressive cartoons are
funnier. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 44, 817-823.
McCauley, C. (1983). Why adolescents enjoy "sick" humor. Medical Aspects of Human
Sexuality, 17, 131-132.
McCauley, C., & Johnson, J. (1983). Survival with End-Stage Renal Disease. New England
Journal of Medicine, 309, 1519-1520. [Letter]
McCauley, C. (1984). A spectator's guide to social policy research. Journal of Policy Analysis
and Measurement, 3, 293-298.
McCauley, C. (1985). Depression and the false consensus effect: a note concerning the
experiment by Tabachnik, Crocker, and Alley. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 48, 15761578.
Ditunno, P., McCauley, C., & Marquette, C. (1985). Sensation seeking behavior as related to
incidence of spinal cord injury. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 66, 152-155.
McCauley, C., Durham, M., Copley, J., & Johnson, J. (1985). Patients' perceptions of treatment
for kidney failure: the impact of personal experience on population predictions. Journal of Experimental
Social Psychology, 21, 138-148.
Hester, L., Koger, P., & McCauley, C. (1985). Individual differences in customer sociability.
European Journal of Social Psychology, 15, 453-456.
Forman, R., & McCauley, C. (1986). Validity of the positive control polygraph test using the field
practice model. Journal of Applied Psychology, 71, 691-698.
5
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
Segal, M., & McCauley, C. (1986). The sociability of commercial exchange in rural, suburban, and
urban locations: a test of the urban overload hypothesis. Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 7, 115135.
Bremer, B., & McCauley, C. (1986). Quality-of-life measures: hospital interview vs. home
questionnaire. Health Psychology, 5, 171-177.
Butler, R., & McCauley, C. (1987). Extraordinary stability and ordinary predictability of academic
success at the United States Military Academy. Journal of Educational Psychology, 79, 83-86.
McCauley, C., & Segal, M. (1987). Social psychology of terrorist groups. In C. Hendrick (Ed.),
Review of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 9 (pp.231-256). Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
McCauley, C. (1988). The content of awareness and top-down versus bottom-up processing. In
R. S. Wyer & T. Srull (Eds.), Advances in Social Cognition, Vol. 1 (pp. 111-118) Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
McCauley, C., & Forman, R. (1988). A review of the OTA's report of polygraph validity. Basic
and Applied Social Psychology, 9, 73-84.
McCauley, C., Thangavelu, K., & Rozin, P. (1988). Sex stereotyping of occupations in relation to
television representations and census facts. Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 9, 197-212.
Beck, L., McCauley, C., Segal, M., & Hershey, L. (1988). Individual differences in prototypicality
judgments about trait categories. Personality and Social Psychology, 55, 286-292.
McCauley, C., & Segal, M. (1989). Terrorist individuals and terrorist groups: the normal
psychology of extreme behavior. In J. Groebel & J. H. Goldstein (Eds.), Terrorism (pp. 41-64). Seville
University Press.
Bremer, B., McCauley, C., Wrona, R., & Johnson, J. (1989). Quality of life in end-stage renal
disease: a re-examination. American Journal of Kidney Diseases, XIII, 200-209.
McCauley, C., Johnson, J., & Copley, J. (1989). Communication of information about therapeutic
alternatives: end-stage renal disease model. Southern Medical Journal, 82, 418-422.
McCauley, C. (1989). The nature of social influence in groupthink: compliance and
internalization. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 57(2), 250-260.
McCauley, C. (1990). Conference discussion: an overview. In J. Haas (Ed.), The Anthropology
of War (pp. 1-24). New York: Cambridge University Press.
Gouge, F., Moore, J., Bremer, B.A., McCauley, C., & Johnson, J. (1990). The quality of life of
donors, potential donors, and recipients of LRD transplantation. Transplantation Proceedings, 22, 24092413.
McCauley, C. (1991). When stereotype discrimination is normative (Letter). Psychological
Science, 2 (3), 204.
6
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
McCauley, C. (1991). Terrorism research and public policy: an overview. In C. McCauley (Ed.),
Terrorism and Political Violence, 3, 126-144. Also published as McCauley, C. (Ed.) (1991). Terrorism
Research and Public Policy. London: Frank Cass.
McCauley, C. (1991). Selection of NSF Graduate Fellows: a case study of psychologists failing to
apply what they know about decision making. American Psychologist, 46, 1287-1291.
Smith, R., & McCauley, C. (1991). Predictors of alcohol abuse behaviors of undergraduates.
Journal of Drug Education, 21, 159-166.
McCauley, C., & Bremer, B. (1991). Subjective quality of life measures for evaluating medical
intervention. Evaluation and the Health Professions, 14, 371-387.
McCauley, C., & Thangavelu, K. (1991). Individual differences in sex stereotyping of occupations
and personality traits. Social Psychology Quarterly, 54, 267-279.
Chapman, G., & McCauley, C. (1993). Early career achievements of National Science
Foundation graduate fellows and honorable mentions: Is Pygmalion at work on NSF winners? Journal of
Applied Psychology, 78, 815-820.
Haidt, J., McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (1993). Disgust. In M. Lewis & J. Haviland (Eds.),
Handbook of Emotions. New York: Guilford Press.
McCauley, C. (1994). Stereotypes as base rate predictions. Psycholoqy, 5(1)[On-line]. Available:
baserate.8.mccauley.
Haidt, J., McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (1994). Individual differences in sensitivity to disgust: A
scale sampling seven domains of disgust elicitors. Personality and Individual Differences, 16 (5), 701713.
McCauley, C., & Johnson, J. (1994). Transplantation failure: Psychosocial consequences and
their management. In H.M. McGee & C. Bradley (Eds.), Quality of Life Following Renal Failure:
Psychosocial challenges accompanying high technology medicine (pp. 211-224). Chur, Switzerland:
Harwood Academic Publishers.
Chapman, G., & McCauley, C. (1994). Predictive validity of quality ratings of National Science
Foundation Graduate Fellows. Educational and Psychological Measurement, 54 (2). 428-438.
McCauley, C., Rozin, P., & Markwith, M. (1994). Sensitivity to indirect contracts with other
persons: AIDS aversion as a composite of averson to strangers, infection, moral taint, and misfortune.
Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 103, 495-504.
Jussim, L., McCauley, C., & Lee, Y.T. (1995). Why study stereotype accuracy and inaccuracy?
In Y.T. Lee, L. Jussim, & C. McCauley (Eds.), Stereotype accuracy: toward an appreciation of group
differences ( pp. 3-28). Washington D.C.: APA Books.
McCauley, C. (1995). Are stereotypes exaggerated? In Y.T. Lee, L. Jussim, & C. McCauley
(Eds.), Stereotype accuracy: toward an appreciation of group differences (pp. 215-243). Washington,
D.C.: APA Books.
7
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
McCauley, C., Jussim, L., & Lee, Y.T. (1995). Stereotype accuracy: toward appreciating group
differences. In Y. T. Lee, L. Jussim & C. McCauley (Eds.), Stereotype accuracy: toward an appreciation
of group differences (pp. 292-313). Washington, D.C.: APA Books.
Holley, J., McCauley, C., Doherty, B., Stackiewicz, L., & Johnson, J. (1996). Patients’ views in
the choice of renal transplant. Kidney International, 49, 494-498.
McCauley, C. (1996). First things first: What is a baserate? Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 19,
33-34.
Wrzesniewski, A., McCauley, C., Rozin, P., & Schwartz, B. (1997). Jobs, careers, and callings:
People's relations to their work. Journal of Research in Personality, 31, 21-33.
McCauley, C. (1997). Understanding addiction: Conventional rewards and lack of control.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 19, 585-586.
Haidt, J., Rozin, P., McCauley, C., and Imada, S. (1997). Body, psyche, and culture: the
relationship between disgust and morality. Psychology and Developing Societies, 9, 107-131.
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., McCauley, C., & Imada, S. (1997). Disgust: Preadaptation and the cultural
evolution of a food-based emotion. In H. MacBeth (Ed.), Food preferences and taste: Continuity and
change. Providence, RI: Berghahn Books, 65-82.
McCauley, C. (1998). When screen violence is not attractive. In J. Goldstein (Ed.), Why we
watch: The attractions of violent entertainment, pp. 144-162. New York: Oxford University Press.
McCauley, C. (1998). Group dynamics in Janis's theory of groupthink: backward and forward.
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 73, 142-162.
Lee, Y.T., Draguns, J., & McCauley, C. (1999). Why study personality in culture? In Y.T. Lee, J.
Draguns, & C. McCauley (Eds.), Personality and person perception across cultures. Mahwah, NJ:
Erlbaum.
McCauley, C., Ottati, V., & Lee, Y.T. (1999). National differences in economic growth: The role of
personality and culture. In Y.T. Lee, J. Draguns, & C. McCauley (Eds.), Personality and person
perception across cultures. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Zhang, K., Lee, Y.T., Liu, Y., & McCauley, C. (1999). Chinese-American differences: A Chinese
view. In Y.T. Lee, J. Draguns, & C. McCauley (Eds.), Personality and person perception across cultures.
Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
McCauley, C., Draguns, J., & Lee, Y.T. (1999). Person perception across cultures. In Y.T. Lee,
J. Draguns, & C. McCauley (Eds.), Personality and person perception across cultures. Mahwah, NJ:
Erlbaum.
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, C. (1999). Disgust: The body and soul emotion. In T.
Dalgleish & M. Power (Eds.), Handbook of cognition and emotion, pp. 429-445. New York: Wiley.
8
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., McCauley, C., Dunlop, L., & Ashmore, M. (1999). Individual differences in
disgust sensitivity: Comparisons and evaluations of paper-and-pencil versus behavioral measures.
Journal of Research in Personality, 33, 330-351.
Wrzesniewski, A., McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (1999). Odor and affect: Individual differences in
the impact of odor on liking for places, things, and people. Chemical Senses, 24(6), 713-721. Spanish
version of the Affective Impact of Odors scale (AIO) and the Odor Awareness Scale (OAS) published by
Buron, E., Bulbena, A., Pailhez, G., & Cabre, A. B. (2011). Versión espa˜nola de dos escalas olfatorias:
fiabilidad y validez. Revista Psiquiatria y Salud Mental, 4(4), 187-194.
McCauley, C. R. (1999). The bet on bias is cockeyed optimism. Commentary on Krueger on
Social-Bias. _PSYCOLOQUY 9(71)_ http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/cgi/psyc/newpsy?9.71
ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/Psycoloquy/1998.volume.9/psyc.98.9.71.social-bias.9.krueger
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, C. (1999). Disgust. In D. Levinson, J. Ponzetti, & P.
Jorgenson (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Emotions, Volume , pp. 188-193. New York: Macmillan.
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, C. (2000). Disgust. In M. Lewis & J. M. Haviland-Jones (Eds.),
Handbook of Emotions, second edition, pp. 637-653. New York: Guilford Press.
McCauley, C., Wright, M., & Harris, M. (2000). Diversity workshops on campus: A survey of
current practice at U.S. colleges and universities. College Student Journal, 34, 100-114.
[Summarized by Tritelli, D. (2001). Diversity workshops: New research. Diversity Digest, 5(2)
Winter, 4-5.]
Harris, I., & McCauley, C. (2000). International workshop on peace education research.
Peacebuilding, 2(5), 3-5.
McCauley, C. (2000). How President Bush moved the U.S. into the Gulf War: Three theories of
group conflict and the construction of moral violation. Journal for the Study of Peace and Conflict, 20002001 Annual Edition, 32-42.
Rozin, P., & McCauley, C. (2000). Asch, Solomon E. In A.E. Kazdin (Ed.), Encyclopedia of
Psychology, Volume 1, pp. 257-259. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association and Oxford
University Press.
McCauley, C. (2000). Some things psychologists think they know about aggression and violence.
The HFG Review, 4 (1), 39-44. Available as http://www.hfg.org/hfg_review/4/mccauley.htm
McCauley, C. (2001). The psychology of group identification and the power of ethnic nationalism.
In D. Chirot & M. Seligman (Eds.), Ethnopolitical warfare: causes, consequences, and possible solutions
(pp. 343-362). Washington, DC: APA Books.
McCauley, C. (2001). What do terrorists want? Psychological Science Agenda, 14(6), 5.
McCauley, C. (2001). The psychology of terrorism.
http://www.ssrc.org/sept11/essays/mccauley.htm
McCauley, C., Plummer, M., Moskalenko, S., & Mordkoff, J. T. (2001). The exposure index: a
measure of intergroup contact. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 7(4), 321-336.
9
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
McCauley, C. (2002). Head-first versus feet-first in peace education. In G. Salomon & B. Nevo
(Eds.), The nature and study of peace education, pp. 247-258. Mahweh, NJ: Erlbaum.
McCauley, C. (2002). The psychological foundations of genocide. In C. Rittner, J.K. Roth & J.M.
Smith (Eds.), Will genocide ever end? (pp. 77-82). St. Paul, MN: Paragon House.
McCauley, C. (2002). Psychological issues in understanding terrorism and the response to
terrorism. In C. Stout (Ed.), The Psychology of Terrorism, Volume III Theoretical Understandings and
Perspectives, pp. 3-30. Westport, CN: Praeger.
Reprinted as McCauley, C. (2004). Psychological issues in understanding terrorism and the
response to terrorism. In C. Stout (Ed.), Psychology of terrorism, condensed edition: Coping with the
continuing threat, pp 33-66. Westport, CN: Praeger.
Reprinted as McCauley, C. (2006). Psychological issues in understanding terrorism and the
response to terrorism. In. In B. Bongar, L. M. Brown, L. E. Beutler, J. N. Breckenridge, P. G. Zimbardo
(Editors), Psychology of Terrorism, pp. 13-31. New York: Oxford University Press.
McCauley, C. (2002). Understanding the 9/11 perpetrators: crazy, lost in hate, or martyred? In
N. Matuszak (Ed.), History Behind the Headlines: The Origins of Ethnic Conflicts Worldwide, Volume 5,
pp. 274-286. New York: Gale Publishing Group.
McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (2003). Solomon Asch: Scientist and Humanist. In G.A. Kimble and
M. Wertheimer (Eds.), Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology, Volume V, pp. 249-262. Mahweh, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum.
Pepitone, A., & McCauley, C. (2003). Experiences de psychologie sociale en milieu naturel
(Experiments in natural settings). In S. Moscovici & F. Buschini (Eds.), Les Methodes des sciences
humaines, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
McCauley, C. (2003). Making sense of terrorism after 9/11. In R. S. Moser & C.E. Frantz (Eds.),
Shocking Violence II: Violent Disaster, War and Terrorism Affecting Our Youth, pp. 10-32. Springfield,
IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Bock, J. G., & McCauley, C. (2003). A call to lateral mission: mobilizing religious authority
against ethnic violence. Mission Studies, XX(2), 9-34.
McCauley, C., & Bock, J. (2004). Why does violence trump peacebuilding? Negativity bias in the
construction of moral violation. In Y.T. Lee, C. McCauley, F. Moghaddam, & S. Worchel (Eds.), The
psychology of ethnic and cultural conflict. Westport, CN: Praeger.
McCauley, C., Worchel, S., Moghaddam, F., & Lee, Y.T. (2004). Contact and identity in
intergroup relations. In Y.T. Lee, C. McCauley, F. Moghaddam, & S. Worchel (Eds.), The psychology of
ethnic and cultural conflict, pp.309-326. Westport, CN: Praeger.
Roccas, S., & McCauley, C. (2004). Values and emotions in the relational models: What
happens when relationship norms are violated? In N. Haslam (Ed.), Relational models: theories,
advances and prospects, pp. 263-286. Mahweh, NJ: Erlbaum.
Royzman, E., McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (2004). From Plato to Putnam: Four ways of thinking
about hate. In R. Sternberg (Ed.), The psychology of hate, pp. 3-35. Washington, D.C.: APA Books.
10
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
Maoz, I., & McCauley, C. (2005). Psychological correlates of support for compromise: A polling
study of Jewish-Israeli attitudes toward solutions to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Political Psychology,
26(5), 791-808.
Schbley, A., & McCauley, C. (2005). Political, religious, and psychological characteristics of
Muslim protest marchers in eight European cities: Jerusalem Day 2002. Terrorism and Political
Violence, 17(4), 551-572.
McCauley, C. (2006). Terrorism and the state: the logic of killing civilians. In James J. F. Forest
(Ed.), The making of a terrorist: Recruitment, training and root causes, Volume Three Root Causes, pp.
238-253. Westport, CN: Praeger Security International.
McCool, M.A., DuToit, F., Petty, C.R., & McCauley, C. (2006). The impact of a program of
prejudice reduction seminars in South Africa. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 36(3), 586-613.
Moskalenko, S., McCauley, C., & Rozin, P. (2006). Group identification under conditions of
threat: College students’ attachment to country, family, ethnicity, religion and university before and after
September 11, 2001. Political Psychology, 27(1), 77-98.
Karagiannis, M., & McCauley, C. (2006). Hizb ut-Tahrir al-Islami: Evaluating the threat posed by a
radical Islamic group that remains nonviolent. Terrorism and Political Violence, 18(2), 315-334.
Cherfas, L., Rozin, P., Cohen, A. B., Davidson, A., & McCauley, C. (2006). The framing of
atrocities: Documenting and exploring wide variation in aversion to Germans and German-related
activities among Holocaust survivors. Peace & Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 12(1), 65-80.
McCauley, C. (2006). Jujitsu politics: Terrorism and response to terrorism. In Paul R. Kimmel and
& Chris E. Stout (Eds.), Collateral Damage: The Psychological Consequences of America's War on
Terrorism, pp. 45-65. Westport, CN: Praeger.
McCauley, C. (2007). War versus justice in response to terrorist attack: competing frames and
their implications. In B. Bongar, L. M. Brown, L. E. Beutler, J. N. Breckenridge, P. G. Zimbardo
(Editors), Psychology of Terrorism, pp. 56-65. New York: Oxford University Press.
Maoz, I., & McCauley, C. (2008). Threat, dehumanization, and support for aggressive retaliatory
policies in asymmetric conflict. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 52(1), February, 93-116.
McCauley, C., & Moskalenko, S. (2008). Mechanisms of political radicalization: Pathways toward
terrorism. Terrorism and Political Violence, 20(3), July, 415-433.
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, Clark R. (2008). Disgust. In M. Lewis, J. M. Haviland-Jones, &
L. F. Barrett (Eds.), Handbook of Emotions, Third Edition, pp. 757-776. New York: Guilford Press.
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, C. (2008). Disgust: The body and soul emotion in the 21st
century. In B. O. Olatunji and D. McKay (Eds.), Disgust and its disorders: Theory, assessment, and
treatment implications, pp. 9-28. Washington, D.C.: APA Books.
11
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
McCauley, C., & Scheckter, S. (2008). What's special about U.S. Muslims? The war on terrorism
as seen by Muslims in the United States, Morocco, Egypt, Pakistan, and Indonesia. Studies in Conflict
and Terrorism, 31(11), 1024-1031.
Moskalenko, S., & McCauley, C. (2009). Measuring political mobilization: The distinction
between activism and radicalism. Terrorism and Political Violence, 21, 239-260.
Dugan, L., Huang, J. Y., LaFree, G., & McCauley, C. (2009). Sudden desistance from terrorism:
The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia and the Justice Commandos of the Armenian
Genocide. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 1(3), 231-249.
Wheatley, J., & McCauley, C. (2009). Losing your audience: Desistance from terrorism in Egypt
after Luxor. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 1(3), 250-268.
McCauley, C. (2009). Group desistance from terrorism: A dynamic perspective. Dynamics of
Asymmetric Conflict, 1(3), 269-293.
Leuprecht, C., Hataley, T., Moskalenko, S., & McCauley, C. (2009). Winning the battle but losing
the war? Narrative and counter-narratives strategy. Perspectives on Terrorism, III(2), 25-35.
(http://www.terrorismanalysts.com/pt/articles/issues/PTv3i2.pdf)
Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & McCauley, C. (2009). Disgust. In D. Sandler & K. R. Scherer (Eds.), The
Oxford companion to emotion and the affective sciences, pp. 121-122. New York: Oxford University
Press.
McCauley, C. (2009). War versus criminal justice in responding to terrorism: The losing logic of
torture. In Terrorism and Torture: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, pp. 63-85. Werner G. K. Stritzke,
Stephan Lewandowsky, David Denemark, Joseph Clare, & Frank Morgan (Editors). New York:
Cambridge.
McCauley, C. & Stellar, J. (2009). U.S. Muslims after 9/11: Poll Trends 2001-2007. Perspectives
on Terrorism, III(3), 35-47.
http://www.terrorismanalysts.com/pt/index.php?option=com_rokzine&view=article&id=86&Itemid=54
Maoz, I., & McCauley, C. (2009). Threat perceptions and feelings as predictors
of Jewish-Israeli support for compromise with Palestinians. Journal of Peace Research, 46(4), 525-539.
McCauley, C., & Moskalenko, S. (2010). Individual and group mechanisms of radicalization. In
L. Fenstermacher, L. Kuznar, T. Rieger, & A. Speckhard (Eds.), Protecting the homeland from
international and domestic security threats: Current multidisciplinary perspectives on root causes, the
role of ideology, and programs for counter-radicalization and disengagement. Washington, D.C.: Topical
multi-layer assessment (SMA) multi-agency and Air Force research laboratory multi-disciplinary white
papers in support of counter-terrorism and counter-WMD. Reprinted as Mechanismen der
Radikalisierung von Individuen und Gruppen, Der Burger im Staat, 2011, 4, 219-224.
Leuprecht, C., Hataley, T., Moskalenko, S., & McCauley, C. (2010). Narratives and counternarratives for global jihad: Opinion versus action. Pp. 58-71 in Eelco J.A.M. Kessels (Ed.), Countering
violent extremist narratives. Breda, The Netherlands: National Coordinator for Counterterrorism (NCTb).
http://english.nctb.nl/Images/Countering%20Violent%20Extremist%20Narratives_tcm92259489.pdf?cp=92&cs=25496
12
Articles in Scholarly Journals or Chapters in Books (continued)
Maoz, I., Freedman, G., & McCauley, C. (2010). Fled or expelled: Representation of Israeli-Arab
conflict in U.S. history books. Peace and Conflict, 16, 1-10.
Leuprecht, C., Hataley, T., Moskalenko, S., & McCauley, C. (2010). Containing the narrative:
Strategy and tactics in countering the storyline of global Jihad. Journal of Policing, Intelligence and
Counter Terrorism, 5(1), 40-55.
Turcan, M., and McCauley, C. (2010). Boomerang: Opinion versus action in the radicalization of
Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 3: 1, 14-31,
McCauley, C. & Scheckter, S. (2011). Reactions to the war on terrorism: Origin-group differences
in the 2007 Pew Poll of U.S. Muslims. Perspectives on Terrorism, 5(1), 38-54.
Maoz, I., & McCauley, C. (2011). Explaining support for violating out-group human rights in conflict:
attitudes toward principles of human rights, trust in the out-group, and intergroup contact. Journal of Applied
Social Psychology, 41(4), 891-905.
McCauley, C. (2011), Muslim World Outreach: The United States intervenes in religious identity.
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 11(1), 43-44.
Moskalenko, C., & McCauley, C. (2011). The psychology of lone-wolf terrorism. Counseling
Psychology Quarterly, 24(2), 115-126.
McCauley, C., Leuprecht, C., Hataley, T., Winn, C. & Biswas, B. (2011). Tracking the war of
ideas: A poll of Ottawa Muslims. Terrorism and Political Violence, 23(5), 804-819.
McCauley, C. (2011). Group desistence from terrorism: The dynamics of actors, actions, and
outcomes. In Rik Coolsaet (ed.) Jihadi terrorism and the radicalisation challenge: European and
American experiences, Second Edition, pp. 187-204. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
McCauley, C. (2012). Politically motivated violent extremism. In C. Leuprecht, T. Hataley, & K.R.
Nossal (Eds.), Evolving transnational threats and border security: A new research agenda, pp. 85-96.
Kingston, Ontario: Centre for International and Defence Policy, Queens University.
McCauley, C. (2012). Fighting over history. Editor’s Introduction to Special Section, “Fighting
over history.” Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 5(2), 96-100.
McCauley, C. (2012). Testing theories of radicalization in polls of U.S. Muslims. Analyses of
Social Issues and Public Policy, 12(1), 296-311.
McCauley C. (2012). Extremes of asymmetric conflict: terrorism and genocide. In Daniel J.
Christie (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Peace Psychology, first edition. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470672532.wbepp052
Karagiannis, E. & McCauley, C. (2013). The emerging Red-Green Alliance: Where political Islam
meets the radical left. Terrorism and Political Violence, 25, 167-182. .
Lee, Y.T., Jussim, L., & McCauley, C. (2013). Stereotypes as categories of knowledge:
Complexity, validity, usefulness, and essence in perceptions of group differences. Advances in
Psychological Science, 21(1), 1-21. http://118.145.16.229:81/Jweb_xlkxjz/EN/volumn/next.shtml
13
McCauley, C., Moskalenko, S. & Van Son, B. (2013). Characteristics of lone-wolf violent
offenders: A comparison of assassins and school attackers. Perspectives on Terrorism, 7(1), 4-24.
McCauley, C. (2013). Intergroup conflict. In H. Pashler (ed.), Encyclopedia of the Mind, Volume
1 (432-434). Los Angeles, CA: Sage.
Seifert, K., & McCauley, C. (in press). Suicide bombers in Iraq, 2003-2010: Disaggregating
targets can reveal insurgent motives and priorities. Terrorism and Political Violence.
Reviews
McCauley, C. (1993). Review of D. Charters (Ed.), Democratic responses to international
terrorism. Conflict Quarterly, XIII, No. 3.
McCauley, C. (1993). Work is the curse of the drinking man. Review of P. Alasuutari's Desire
and craving: a cultural theory of alcoholism. Contemporary Drug Problems, Winter, 783-791.
McCauley, C. (1994). Cops and bobbers. Review of J. Beck & M. Rosenbaum's Pursuit of
Ecstasy. Contemporary Drug Problems, Winter, 667-672.
McCauley, C. (2001). Review of D. Horowitz's The Deadly Ethnic Riot. Journal of Conflict,
Security and Development, 1(3), 164-168.
McCauley, C., & Lee, Y.T. (2004). Getting past the pictures in our heads. Review of David
Schneider’s Psychology of Stereotyping. PsyCRITIQUES-Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of
Books,December 7 2004, Vol. 49, Supplement 11,
(http://www.psycinfo.com/psyccritiques/display/?uid=2004-20597-001).
McCauley, C. (2005). Review of A. Varshney’s Ethnic Conflict and Civic Life: Hindus and
Muslims in India. Terrorism and Political Violence, 17(4), 646-653.
McCauley, C. (2005). The politics of terrorism. Review of Robert Pape, Dying to Win, and of
Maya Bloom, Dying to Kill. Middle East Journal, 59(4), Autumn, pp. 663-666.
McCauley, C. (2006). Review of S. I. Wilkinson, Votes and Violence: Electoral competition and
ethnic riots in India. Political Psychology, 27(4), 635-638.
McCauley, C. (2006). Review of Ami Pedahzur (Ed.), Root causes of suicide terrorism: The
globalization of martyrdom. Middle East Journal, 60(4), Autumn, 826-827.
McCauley, C. (2007). Review of Joe Novarro, Hunting terrorists: A look at the psychopathology
of terror. Criminal Justice Review, 32(1), March, pp.70-71.
McCauley, C. (2007). Review of Mohammed Hafez, Manufacturing human bombs: the making of
Palestinian suicide bombers, of Mohammed Hafez, Suicide bombers in Iraq: the strategy and ideology of
martyrdom, and of David Cook & Olivia Allison, Understanding and addressing suicide attacks: the faith
and politics of martyrdom operations. Middle East Journal, 62(1), Winter, 179-182.
McCauley, C. (2008). Review of Neil J. Smelser, The faces of terrorism: social and psychological
dimensions. International Review of Modern Sociology, 34(1), 157-160.
McCauley, C. (2008). Drug gangs and terrorists. Review of Michael Kenny, From Pablo to
Osama: Trafficking and terrorist networks, government bureaucracies, and competitive adaptation; and
14
of Alexander Stille, Excellent cadavers: the Mafia and the death of the first Italian republic. Dynamics of
Asymmetric Conflict: Pathways toward Terrorism and Genocide, 1(1), 103-106.
McCauley, C. (2010). Does political radicalization depend on ideology? Review of Ziad Munson,
The making of pro-life activists: How social movement mobilization works. Dynamics of Asymmetric
Conflict: Pathways toward Terrorism and Genocide, 2(3), 213-215.
McCauley, C. (2010). Party of Islamic liberation in the ‘Stans. Review of Emmanuel Karagiannis,
Political Islam in central Asia: The challenge of Hizb ut-Tahrir. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict:
Pathways toward Terrorism and Genocide, 2010, 3(1), 62-67.
McCauley, C., & Moskalenko, S. (2010). Recent U.S. thinking about terrorism and
counterterrorism: Babysteps towards a dynamic view of asymmetric conflict. Review essay: The US
Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Field Manual: US Army Field Manual No. 3-24; Marine Corps
Warfighting Publication N. 3-33.5, 2006; Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat, by M.D.
Silber and A. Bhatt, 2007; Social Science for Counterterrorism: Putting the Pieces Together, edited by
Paul K. Davis and Kim Cragin, 2009; Protecting the Homeland from International and Domestic
Terrorism Threats: Current Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Root Causes, the Role of Ideology, and
Programs for Counter-radicalization and Disengagement, edited by Laurie Fenstermacher, Larry Kuznar,
Tom Rieger, and Ann Speckhard, 2010. Terrorism and Political Violence, 22(4), 641-657.
McCauley, C., & Moskalenko, S. (2011). Do suicide terrorists have personality problems?
Review of Driven to death: Psychological and social aspects of suicide terrorism, by Ariel Merari, 2010,
and The banality of suicide terrorism: The naked truth about the psychology of Islamic suicide bombing,
by Nancy Kobrin, 2010. Terrorism and Political Violence, 23, 108-111.
McCauley, C. (2012). What can ideas about genocide tell us about terrorism? Review of
Overcoming Evil: Genocide, Violent Conflict and Terrorism, by Ervin Staub, 2011. Global Responsibility to
Protect, 4, 363–367.
Moskalenko, S., & McCauley, C. (2012). The political power of martyrdom. Review of Creating
young martyrs: Conditions that make dying in a terrorist attack seem like a good idea, by Alice LoCicero
and Samuel J. Sinclair, 2008; Martyrdom: Radicalization and terrorist violence among British Muslims, by
Jon Cole and Benjamin Cole, 2009; and The globalization of martyrdom: AI Qaeda, Salafi Jihad, and the
diffusion of suicide attacks, by Assaf Moghadam, 2008. Terrorism and Political Violence, 24, 504-510.
McCauley, C. (2012). Using emotion to move intergroup conflict to intergroup violence. Review
of Western intervention in the Balkans: The strategic use of emotion in conflict, by Roger
D. Petersen, 2011. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 5(2), 143-148.
McCauley, C. (2013). Review of Rethinking Violence: States and Non-State Actors in Conflict, by
Erica Chenoweth and Adria Lawrence. Terrorism and Political Violence, 25(2), 340-344.
McCauley, C. (2013). Review of Empires of Mud, by Antonio Giustozzi. Terrorism and Political
Violence, 25(3),508-509.
Abstracts
McCauley, C., Gouge, S., Moore, T., Johnson, J., & Bremer, B. (1985). Impact of living related
donor transplantation on quality of life. Kidney International, 27, 341.
McCauley, C., Holley, J., Doherty, B., Stackiewicz, L., & Johnson, J. (1995). The role of bias and
patients' views in the choice of renal transplant. Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 6, 1092.
15
Miscellaneous Publications
McCauley, C. (1974, November 5). Dial M for Mass Transit. New York Times.
McCauley, C., & Handelsman, M. (1976, May). Sales tricks of a Con Artist. Psychology Today, 9
(12) pp 78-87, 94-96.
Johnson, T., McCauley, C., & Rood, O. (1977, November-December). The next democracy:
technology in the service of self-government. World Future Society Bulletin, 11, 1-6.
McCauley, C. (1980). Vox populi. Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin, 1, 45.
McCauley, C. (1988). Blood Brothers: The social psychology of terrorism. Bryn Mawr Alumnae
Bulletin, Winter, 4-5.
McCauley, C. (1990). Light-bending: prediction and theory. Science, 248, 423. [Letter]
McCauley, C. (1991, November 7). How to attract good people to teaching. Wall Street Journal.
McCauley, C. (1991, December 28). Drawing better people to teaching. Philadelphia Inquirer.
Reprinted in Scranton Times, Wednesday, February 12, 1992.
Gupta, D., Merari, A., Crenshaw, M., & McCauley, C. (2002). "Selfish selflessness? (suicide
bombers)." The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 19, v48 i32, pB4(1).
Rozin, P., & McCauley, C. (2002). The psychology of Sept. 11. The Daily Pennsylvanian, Friday
September 13, p.6.
McCauley, C. (2002). Understanding the 9/11 perpetrators: Crazy, lost in hate, or martyred? In
N. Matuszak (Ed.), History behind the headlines: The origins of ethnic conflicts worldwide (Vol. 5, pp.
274-286). New York: Gale Publishing Group.
(http://www.ideologiesofwar.com/docs/cm_understanding.htm)
McCauley, C. R., & Rozin, P. (2003). Solomon Asch: Scientist and humanist. In: G. A. Kimble &
M. Wertheimer (eds.). Pioneers of Psychology, Volume V. (pp.249-262). Mahwah, New Jersey:
Lawrence Erlbaum.
McCauley, C. (2004, March 21). The Spanish vote is al-Qaida's loss: The terrorists count on a
united crusade against them to erect a wall between Islam and the West, not a U.S. ally backing off.
Newsday, March 21, Opinion Section, p. A56.
McCauley, C. (2006). Understanding war: From individual illusions to intergroup understanding.
Ideologies of War, Volume XXXIV, January. (http://ideologiesofwar.com/papers/)
McCauley, C.R. (2006). The Psychology of Terrorism. In K. Lee Lerner and Brenda Wilmoth
Lerner (Eds.), Terrorism: Essential Primary Sources, 448-451. Detroit: Thomson Gale. .
McCauley, C. (2006). Solomon Asch. In William A. Darity, Jr. (Ed.), International Encyclopedia
of the Social Sciences, 2nd edition. Detroit: Thomson Gale.
McCauley, C. (2008). Terrorism as jujitsu politics. Psychologists for Social Responsibility, PsySR
16
Issues: Terrorism. http://www.psysr.org/issues/terrorism/
McCauley, C. 2008). Editors’ welcome to the inaugural issue of Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict
(DAC). Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict: Pathways toward Terrorism and Genocide, 1(1), 1-5.
Lectures and Conference Presentations (since 2005)
Air Force Research Laboratory, Crowd Behavior Workshop, San Antonio, TX, 24-27 January
2005. Invited participant.
Centra Technology, Arlington, VA, 18 February 2005. “Euro Islamic Protest Marchers on
Jerusalem Day 2002: The Salafist Difference Making Less Difference?”
Department of Homeland Security, Partnership Program, Washington, D.C. 21 March 2005.
Invited participant.
Harry Frank Guggenhem Foundation, Bearing Arms: Who Should Serve?, New York City, 1 April
2005. “Introducing Charles Moskos.”
Office of the Assistant Director or Central Intelligence for Analysis and Production. International
Conference on Intelligence Analysis, McLean, VA, 2-4 May 2005. “Developing Research Interests of the
Homeland Security Center of Excellence for Behavioral and Social Research on Terrorism and CounterTerrorism.”
Royal College of Defense Studies, London, ITI 2005 (International Terrorism and Intelligence
2005), London, UK, 17 June 2005. Invited participant.
NC-START Executive Meeting, University of Maryland, 29 September 2005. Introducing Dr.
Stuart Croft, ESRC Programme Director, New Security Challenges, University of Birmingham.
Sandia National Laboratories, Foilfest: Community Enabled Security Workshop, 18-21 July 2005.
Invited participant.
Department of Homeland Security and the National Counterterrorism Center, Terrorists and
CBRN Weapons: Motivation, Intent, and Constraints, Centra Technology, Arlington, VA, 14 November
2005. Invited participant.
LaSalle University, Philadelphia, 2005 Fall Lecture Series, 17 November 2005. “Tactics and
Ideology of Europe’s Suicide Bombers: Implications for the U.S.”
Department of Homeland Security, Partnership Program, Washington, D.C., 21 November 2005.
Invited participant.
Sandia National Laboratories SME Workshop, Washington, D.C., 13-14 February 2006,
“Psychological Models of Radicalization.”
Society for Cross-Cultural Research Annual Meeting, Savannah, GA, 22-25 February 2006.
“More than smart bombs: the psychology of suicide terrorism.”
Solomon Asch Tuesday Seminar Series, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 11 April
2006. “More than smart bombs: the psychology of suicide terrorism.”
17
Quadrangle Speaker Series, Bryn Mawr, PA, 20 April 2006. “More than smart bombs: the
psychology of suicide terrorism.”
Federal Laboratory Consortium for Technology Transfer Annual Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, 4
May 2006. “National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism.”
University of Pennsylvania Alumni Reunion, Philadelphia, PA, 13 May 2006. “More than smart
bombs: the psychology of suicide terrorism.”
Science and Technology Expert Partnership, Advances in Cognitive and Mind Sciences
Conference, Tysons Corner, McLean, VA, 15-16 May 2006. “Why does no one die for his tennis club?
The power of ethnic nationalism.”
American Psychological Science Annual Meeting, New York City, NY, 26 May 2006. Invited
symposium, The Psychology of Terrorism, “Suicide terrorism is more than smart bombs: the strategic
value of martyrdom.”
National Consortium for Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), University of
Maryland, 28 June 2006. Terrorist Motivations, Katrina Response: New Research Challenges Current
Government Strategies. Invited participant.
International Society of Political Psychology Annual Meeting, Barcelona, 12-15 July 2006.
Section Chair: Political Violence: Causes, consequences, prevention, intervention. “The ingroup politics
of suicide terrorism” (14 July).
International Association of Applied Psychology Annual Meeting, Athens, 16-21 July 2006.
“Ethnopolitical Conflict” (17 July). “Hate in terrorism and genocide: What we need to know to make a
difference” (18 July).
Summer Hard Problem Program of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, MITRE
Corporation, Bedford, MA, 24 July – 4 August 2006. Invited participant.
American Psychological Association Annual Meeting, New Orleans, 12 August 2006. “More than
smart bombs: the psychology of suicide terrorism.”
Department of Homeland Security Centers of Excellence, B338 Rayburn Office Building,
Washington, D.C., 14 September 2006. From Science to Security. Invited participant.
International Center for Study of Terrorism, Pennsylvania State University, 8-9 October 2006.
Advanced Research Workshop on the Psychology of Terror. Invited participant.
Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment (FREE), Wingspread Conference
Center, Racine, WI, 8-13 October 2006. From Terrorism to Tornados: Mitigating Disruptions to Civil
Liberties and the Economy. “War versus justice in response to terrorist attacks” (11 October).
“Terrorism and the state:The logic of killing civilians” (12 October).
Society for Experimental Social Psychology Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, 14 October 2006.
Chair, invited symposium, Psychology of Intergroup Hostility and Violence. “Why Does No One Die For
His Tennis Club: The Power of Ethnic Nationalism.”
Eighth Annual Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies, Columbia University Teachers College,
NY, NY, 14 December 2006. Humiliation and Violent Conflict. “Understanding humiliation as suppressed
anger.”
18
STEP: Science and Technology Expert Partnership, Director of National Intelligence, Solomon
Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict, Philadelphia, PA, 5-6 January 2007. Social Dynamics
of Political Activism and Radicalization: Workshop 1: Social Movement Theory: Concepts, Data,
and Predictions. Co-organizer and technical leader.
Department of Homeland Security, Directorate for Preparedness, Terrorism / Countering
Terrorism Course, Homeland Security Institute, Arlington, VA, 6 February 2007. “Psychology of
Terrorism.“
STEP: Science and Technology Expert Partnership, Director of National Intelligence, Eastern
Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, 12-13 March 2007. Social Dynamics of Political Activism and
Radicalization: Workshop 2: Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Sudan.
First Annual DHS University Network Summit on Research and Education Summit, L’Enfant
Plaza Hotel, Washington, D.C., 15 March 2007. Human Factors Panel: “Models and Mechanisms of
Radicalization.”
Interagency Strategic Communication Fusion Team, State Department Annex, Washington, D.C.
16 March 2007. Progress report on STEP Activism/Radicalism Project.
STEP: Science and Technology Expert Partnership, Director of National Intelligence, Edinburgh,
Scotland, 24-27 May 2007. Social Dynamics of Political Activism and Radicalization: Workshop 3:
Muslim Brotherhood in France, Germany, and the U.K.
International Society of Political Psychology Annual Meeting, Portland, OR, 5 July 2007. “War
versus justice: Framing state response to terrorist attack.”
Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Advisory Committee (HSSTAC),
Arlington, VA, 19 Sep 2007. Political radicalization in the pyramid model.
Mary Washington University, Fredericksburg, VA, 19 November 2007. “More than smart bombs:
the psychology of suicide terrorism.”
Radicalization: Foresight and Warning CENS-GFF Workshop, Singapore, 3-5 February 2008.
Panel One: The threat and process of violent radicalization. Why do ordinary people become
extremists? “Models and mechanisms of political radicalization.”
Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, invited speaker, 6 February 2008. “Models and
mechanisms of political radicalization.”
Determining a Research Agenda for Disrupting IED Terror Campaigns: Finding the Weak Links.
National Academies Beckman Center, Irvine, CA, 14-15 February 2008.
Transportation Security Administration, Arlington, VA , 3 April 2008. “Radicalization.”
Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA, 14 April 2008. “Models and mechanisms of political
radicalization.”
Operating within the Human Dimension: The Collection and Analysis Challenge Day 1. Arlington,
VA, 24 April 2008. “Models and mechanisms of political radicalization.”
19
International Society of Political Psychology Annual Meeting, Paris, France, 12 July 2008.
Political conflict, violence, and crisis: Approaches to terrorism research. “Models and measures of
political radicalization.”
Fourteenth European Conference on Personality, Tartu, Estonia, 18 July 2008. Psychology of
love and hate (convenors Gershon Breslavs and Clark McCauley), “Thinking about love and hate.”
American Psychological Association Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, 15 August 2008. Symposium:
Asymmetric Conflict. “Asymmetric conflict as politics.”
Conference on Rethinking Ethnicity and Ethnic Strife: Multidisciplinary Perspectives, Central
European University, Budapest, 25-27 September 2008. “The political power of ethnicity: A
psychological perspective.”
START Workshop on Human and Social Forces in the Spread of the IED Threat, University of
Maryland, 20 November 2008. Invited participant.
Department of Homeland Security START Brown Bag Series, 21 November 2008. “Mechanisms
of radicalization and what they mean for Homeland Security.”
Main Line School Night, Bryn Mawr College Lecture Series on the Middle East, Bryn Mawr, PA,
25 November 2008. “Political radicalization: Pathways to Terrorism.”
Violent Intent Modeling and Simulation (VIMS) Group Violence Subject Matter Expert Panel, UNC
Chapel Hill, 16 January 2009.
DHS/START I&A Analytic Roundtable, DHS Nebraska Avenue Complex, Washington, D.C., 29
January 2009. “Models and mechanisms of political radicalization and terrorism.”
Strategic Multi-Layer Assessment (SMA) Monday Telecon Series, 2 February 2009. “Mechanisms
of political radicalization.”
Group Violence Subject Matter Expert (SME) Panel Meeting, Violent Intent Modeling and
Simulation (VIMS), Research Triangle International, Washington, D.C. 16 March 2009.
U.S.- U.K. Joint Research Meeting on Radicalization and Counter-radicalization, Hilton Garden
Inn, Washington, D.C., 14 April 2009.
SOCOM Global Synchronization Conference, MacDill AFB, Tampa, FL, 23 April 2009. “Models
and mechanisms of political radicalization.”
International Terrorism and Intelligence (ITI 2009), Washington, D.C., 22-23 June 2009.
International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) Annual Meeting, Dublin, Eire, 15 July 2009.
Panel: Terrorism, Psychology, and Deterrence. “Sudden Desistance: Lessons from ASALA/JCAG and
EIG.”
Trends in Transnational Terrorism Workshop. Office of the Under Secretary of Defense, WBB
Consulting, Reston, VA, 23 July 2009.
Models and mechanisms of political radicalization and terrorism. Teleconference with
Interagency Strategic Communication Network ("SC Network"), U.S. State Department, 11 Sep 2009.
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Group Violence Subject Matter Expert (SME) Panel Meeting, Violent Intent Modeling and
Simulation (VIMS), Research Triangle International, Washington, D.C. 9 March 2010.
Workshop on Defining a Strategic Campaign for Working with Partners to Counter and
Delegitimize Violent Islamist Extremism. DoD and Rand, Gallup Washington, Washington, D.C. 19 May
2010.
Media, Psychology and Representations in Asymmetric Conflict. Conference sponsored by The
Smart Family Institute of Communication and the Swiss Center for Conflict Research, Hebrew University,
Jerusalem, 26 May 2010. Keynote Lecture: “Terrorism and counterterrorism: Mechanisms of
radicalization in asymmetric conflict.”
Workshop on Emotions and Civil War. Paris, College de France, 10-11 June 2010. Invited
participant.
International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, 9 July
2009. Roundtable: “What is radicalization?”
Radicalization in Western Societies: Preventing “Homegrown” Terrorism, Tuebingen, Germany,
8-9 September 2010. Chair, Workshop on Political Radicalization.
Countering Terrorism Technical Support Office (TTSO) and Office of Naval Research (ONR)
Conference, Countering violent extremism-radicalization, Arlington, VA, 5-7 October 2010. Invited
participant.
Seventh Workshop on Humiliation and Violent Conflict, Teachers College, Columbia University, 9
December 2010. Round Table 1: “How is humiliation relevant to destructive conflict?”
SME Workshop, US Attitudes towards Terrorism and Counterterrorism: A Supplemental Module
for the General Social Survey, University of Maryland, 4 February 2011. Invited participant.
Bryn Mawr Club of Southern California, Beverly Hills, 12 March 2011. Faculty Lecture:
“Psychological Mechanisms that Fuel Political Mass Murder.”
Public Safety Canada, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, the Canada Border Services
Agency, the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, and the Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council of Canada, Transnational Threat and Border Security Workshop, Ottawa,
26-27 June 2011. “Politically Motivated Violent Extremism.”
International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) Annual Meeting, Bilgi University Istanbul,
Turkey, 9-12 July, 2011. Panel: Multi-disciplinary Perspectives on Terrorism Research, “Who believes
in the ‘clash of civilizations’? Panel: Media, Psychology and Narratives in Asymmetric Conflict,
“Mechanisms of radicalization in asymmetric conflict: The role of humiliation in the Jasmine Revolution
and the Egyptian protest movement.”
American Psychological Association Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., 15 August 2011.
Symposium: Psychology of Terrorism—Current and Future Directions, “Psychology of Political
Radicalization.”
LaSalle University Diplomat in Residence Program, Philadelphia, PA, 15 September 2011. Ten
Years After 9/11: America’s War on Terrorism, “Ten Years of Terrorism Research: What have we
learned?”
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Canadian Association of Security and Intelligence Studies, Ottawa, Canada, 9 November 2011.
Invited participant, Panel I – Radicalization in Canada-Release of new research on radicalization in the
Ottawa region.
Fifth annual Strategic Multi-layer Assessment (SMA) Conference, National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, Maryland, 29-30 November 2011. Influence strategies of state and non-state actors: Impacts
of social, cognitive and neurobiological sciences on key aspects of national security. Invited participant,
Panel on IVEO—Neurobiology Pilot Effort on AQAP.
International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) Annual Meeting, Chicago, 7 July 2012.
Panel: New Directions in Terrorism Research. “Five things I have learned about terrorism since 9/11.”
Lone Wolf and Autonomous Cell Terrorism, Conference organized by the Center for Police
Research, Uppsala University, Sweden, 24-26 September 2012. Invited participant: “Characteristics of
Lone Wolf Violent Offenders: A Comparison of School Attackers and Assassins.”
International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, The Hague Expert Roundtable Meeting,
Radicalisation, De-Radicalisation, Counter-Radicalisation: Where do we stand in our understanding?
The Hague, NL, 18-19 January 2013. Invited participant.
Strategic Multi-layer Assessment (SMA) Teleconference, 1400-1500EST 26 February 2013,
Invited presentation. “War of Ideas.”
Miller Center Forum, University of Virginia, 4 March 2013. “Friction: How radicalization happens
to them and us.” Invited one-hour public-affairs television program taped before a live audience and
broadcast on PBS stations.
Media contacts after 9/11
Dow Jones Publications Library: 31 newspaper citations concerning terrorism, terrorists, and
public reaction to terrorists between 11 Sep and 27 November 2001. Bryn Mawr College clipping
service: Additional 34 citations in smaller newspapers. Total 65 citations.
6 August 2005, ABC News Nightline, “Experts: Suicide Bombers Not Crazy.”
http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/LondonBlasts/story?id=1004809&page=1
20 Sep 2006, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, “Are we safer now than five years ago?”
http://www.ajc.com/blogs/content/shared-blogs/ajc/woman/entries/2006/09/20/are_we_safer_th.html
9 Jan 2010, New York Times. “The Terrorist Mind: An Update,” by Sarah Kershaw.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/10/weekinreview/10kershaw.html
26 Mar 2010, New York Times. “When does political anger turn to violence?” by Ben Carey.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/28/weekinreview/28carey.html?scp=1&sq=mccauley&st=cse
31 Mar 2010, VEJA (Brazilian Magazine), terrorism and suicide terrorism interview. Julia de
Medeiros.
September 2011. APA Monitor, p77. “Bin Laden’s death: What does it mean? Political and social
psychologists weigh in” by Tori DeAngelis. http://www.apa.org/monitor/2011/09/bin-laden.aspx
Research Interests
Stereotype and essence in group perception, group identification, group dynamics and intergroup
conflict, diversity workshops and peace education, psychology of intergroup emotions, terrorism and
political violence.
Administrative and Service Activities at Bryn Mawr College
22
Committee for Review of Research with Human Subjects, 1973-1996 (Chair, 1979-1996).
Curriculum Committee, 1986-1989, one semester substitute 1974, 1982, 1985.
Research Consultant to Committe on Academic Priorities Study of the Graduate School, 1977.
Research Consultant to Admissions Office, Bryn Mawr College, 1980-1984.
Producer for Alumnae Office (1980) of "Television and Society I: The Impact of Political
Advertising" David Altman vs. Robert McClure.
Admissions Committee: 1980-1983, 1991-1994.
Research Consultant to BMC English Department, 1985-1986.
Research Consultant to Wyndham Committee, 1986.
Committee on Undergraduate Scholarships, 1989-1990.
"Report on data of admitted students 1982-1986." Summer 1991 analysis of Admissions Office
data.
"Agreement of ratings of Admissions folders". Analysis of experiment with blind ratings for winter
1991 early decision applicants.
Temporary chair of psychology department and temporary representative to the Committee on
the Coordination of the Sciences, Jan - Jun 1993.
Undergraduate Council, Executive Committee, 1993-2008
Psychology Department IRB representative, 2009-present
Psychology Department representative, Minority Postdoctoral Fellowship Search Committee 2010
Supervised Undergraduate Research (since 1992)
Jean Lim and Jennifer Reed, 1992-93.
Joanna Garbush, 1993-94.
Jenny Stein, 1994-95.
Greta Doctoroff, 1995-96.
Mary Wright, 1996-97.
Mary Harris, summer 1997.
Brooke Williams, summer 1996, 1997-98.
Mary Plummer and Sophia Moskalenko, summer 1998.
Katie Schomaker, summer 2001.
Emma Wicker, 2001-02.
Maria Soarez, 2002-03.
Holly Katz, 2003-2004.
Norma Altshuler 2005.
Jin Lee, 2005-2006.
Jessica Engelman, summer 2007.
Ben Van Son, summer 2011.
Kelsey Grimes, 2011-2012.
Ben Van Son, 2012-2013.
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