1. Introduction: Normative Conceptions of Democratic Citizenship and Evolving Empirical Research Part I: Civic Knowledge 2. The Psychology of Civic Learning 3. What Knowledge is of Most Worth? Part II: Persuasion processes and interventions in contemporary democracies 4. Shallow cues with deep effects: Trait judgments from faces and voting decisions 5. Taking the Political Environment Seriously: Strategic Political Rhetoric and Citizen Decision-Making 6. The Role of Persuasion Strategies in Motivating Individual and Collective Action Part III: Group identity 7. Social Identity and Citizenship in a Pluralistic Society 8. The politics of recognition: A social psychological perspective Part IV: Hate crimes and tolerance 9. Diverging Ideological Viewpoints on Pathways to More Harmonious Intergroup Relations 10. Tolerance and the Contact Hypothesis: A Field Experiment 11. Racial Stereotyping and Political Attitudes: The View from Political Science Part V: Technology and mass media 12. Collective identity and the mass media 13. Social Identity and Representations of Society and Politics in The News Part VI: Commentaries 14. Experimental Social Psychology, Broader Contexts, and the Politics of Multiculturalism 15. Political Psychology: The Promise of (and Impediments to) Synergistic Interdisciplinary Scholarship 16. What has Political Psychology to offer regarding Democratic Citizenship?
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