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NEITHER LIBERTY NOR SAFETY: THE IMPACT OF FEAR ON INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS, AND SOCIETIES, PART III
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

NEITHER LIBERTY NOR SAFETY: THE IMPACT OF FEAR ON INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS, AND SOCIETIES, PART III

Sandra L. Bloom
Psychotherapy and politics international, v 3(2), pp 96-111
01 Jun 2005
url
https://doi.org/10.1002/ppi.23View
Published, Version of Record (VoR) Open

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Multidisciplinary Social Sciences
The third in a series of four papers describing how minds and bodies of individuals are affected by severe stress. The purpose is to develop a deeper understanding of what happens to stressed individuals who come together to form stressed organizations and the impact of this stress on organizational leaders. The series also explores the parallel process that occurs when traumatized individuals and stressed organizations come together to form stressed societies. Part I focused on the basic human stress response. Part II explored the more extended impact of severe, chronic, and repetitive exposure to stress on the functioning of the emotional system and the ways in which human beings tend to adapt to adversity and thus come to normalize highly abnormal behavior. The focus in Part III is on the impact of chronic stress on memory, the ability to put words to feelings and the tendency to automatically repeat the past.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#5 Gender Equality

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Web of Science research areas
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
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