Combat + Psychological aspects
Label
Combat + Psychological aspects
Name
Combat + Psychological aspects
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of36
- What it is like to go to war, Karl Marlantes
- Winning fights, 12 proven principles for winning on the street, in the ring, at life, Dr. Phillip M. Stephens
- Combat stress, a concept for dealing with the human dimension of urban conflict
- Like lions they fought, the Zulu war and the last Black empire in South Africa, Robert B. Edgerton
- Combat and operational behavioral health, senior editor, Elspeth Cameron Ritchie
- On Killing, Lt. Col. Dave Grossman
- Speed and the fog of war, sense and respond logistics in Operation Iraqi Freedom-I, Paul Needham and Christopher Snyder
- Head strong, how psychology is revolutionizing war, Michael D. Matthews
- No more heroes, madness & psychiatry in war, Richard A. Gabriel
- Dragnet, a case study of the CLEAR system, Samuel Musa, Matt Keegan and Giles Kyser
- Why they fight, combat motivation in the Iraq War, Leonard Wong [and others]
- On killing, the psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society, Dave Grossman
- The last and greatest battle, finding the will, commitment, and strategy to end military suicides, John Bateson
- On combat, the psychology and physiology of deadly conflict in war and in peace, by Dave Grossman with Loren W. Christensen
- The deserters, a hidden history of World War II, Charles Glass
- On combat, Lt. Col. Dave Grossman
- The wounded platoon, Frontline co-production with Mongoose Pictures in assciation with the BBC; producers, Dan Edge and Christopher Buchanan; writer and director, Dan Edge
- A sniper's journey, the truth about the man behind the rifle, Gary D. Mitchell with Michael Hirsh
- Combat deployment and the returning police officer, by, Barbara Webster
- On combat, the psychology and physiology of deadly conflict in war and in peace, by Dave Grossman with Loren W. Christensen
- Conflict, how soldiers make impossible decisions, Neil D. Shortland, Laurence J. Alison, and Joseph M. Moran
- What it is like to go to war, Karl Marlantes
- Command dysfunction, minding the cognitive war, Arden B. Dahl
- The 71F advantage, applying Army research psychology for health and performance gains, edited by Paul T. Bartone, Ross H. Pastel, and Mark A. Vaitkus ; foreword by David A. Rubenstein
- Signature wounds, the untold story of the military's mental health crisis, David Kieran
- On killing, the psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society, Lieutenant Colonel Dave Grossman
- Going to war, a production of Twin Cities Public Television, inc., in association with Vulcan Productions, inc. and PBS ; produced and directed by Michael Epstein
- On killing remotely, the psychology of killing with drones, Lieutenant Colonel Wayne Phelps (USMC, Retired)
- An intimate history of killing, face-to-face killing in twentieth-century warfare, Joanna Bourke
- The current status of suicide prevention programs in the military, hearing before the Subcommittee on Military Personnel of the Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, One Hundred Twelfth Congress, first session, hearing held September 9, 2011
- On combat, the psychology and physiology of deadly conflict in war and in peace, by Dave Grossman with Loren W. Christensen
- Enduring battle, American soldiers in three wars, 1776-1945, Christopher H. Hamner
- A Bridge in Babylon, Stories of a Military Chaplain in Iraq
- Emotional responses to traumatic events
- Unbreakable, a Navy SEAL's way of life, Thom Shea
- Afterwar, healing the moral injuries of our soldiers, Nancy Sherman
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1
- Sub focus2