{
  "creator": [
    "Clayton, Gina",
    "Fitter, Mike"
  ],
  "date": [
    "2005-08-31"
  ],
  "description": [
    "Arlene Audergon’s new book, ‘The War Hotel’, is for anyone with an  interest in conflict and the human psyche. The War Hotel is addressed  not only to people who are directly affected by or working with  conflict, but also to those of us who are armchair watchers of the TV  news, concerned, but unsure of our relationship to the scenes we see.  The author’s thesis is that those who make war – politicians and  military leaders – understand how human psychology can be used to  support war. And those who turn away and close their hearts and minds to  war as it erupts and continues are as much participants in the  unfolding drama as are those who become swept up in it. The consequent  purpose of the book is an examination of this psychology to generate  awareness of our part in the creation of war, so that we may be able to  use our selves and our psyches differently."
  ],
  "format": [
    "text/html"
  ],
  "identifier": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/366",
    "10.5964/ejop.v1i3.366"
  ],
  "language": [
    "eng"
  ],
  "publisher": [
    "PsychOpen GOLD / Leibniz Institut for Psychology (ZPID)"
  ],
  "relation": [
    "https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/366/366.html"
  ],
  "rights": [
    "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0"
  ],
  "source": [
    "Europe’s Journal of Psychology; Vol. 1 No. 3 (2005)",
    "1841-0413"
  ],
  "title": [
    "The War Hotel: Psychological Dynamics in Violent Conflict"
  ],
  "type": [
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/article",
    "info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion"
  ]
}