The Psychology of Brexit examines the psychological causes, catalysts, and consequences of Brexit.
His previous books include: Psychology in Crisis (2018) and Rethinking Psychology (2017)..
He is a prominent advocate for scientific psychology, evidence-based policy, scientific outreach, and the role of Psychology in society, and writes widely on the Psychology of empiricism and of empirically disputable claims, especially as they pertain to science, health, and medicine.
He is former President of the Psychological Society of Ireland (2004-2005), and of the international Stress and Anxiety Research Society (2014-2016) and is Associate Editor of the International Journal of Psychophysiology.
Hughes is Professor of Psychology at the National University of Ireland, Galway.
About the Author Brian M.
In this compelling new book, psychologist Brian Hughes examines what scientific Psychology reveals about the dynamics of Brexit, what Brexit teaches us about ourselves, and what we can do to deal with its short-term impact and long-term fallout.
And it explores the psychological impact of Brexit - its effect on social attitudes, future thinking, and collective and individual mental health.
It reveals the way cultural biases like sexism influence how Brexit politicians are portrayed and perceived.
It shows how social stereotypes and motivated irrationality help otherwise groundless beliefs thrive in everyday culture, leading to group polarisation and echo-chamber reasoning.
This book discusses how reasoning biases and illusions of control propel - and pollute - the perspective of both Leavers and Remainers.
It is a product of human Psychology - shaped in critical ways by people\'s perceptions, preferences, choices, self-images, attitudes, ideas, assumptions, group relations, and reasoned (or ill-reasoned) conclusions.
Rather, it exists because people decided to make it exist.
Unlike most cultural upheavals, Brexit is not the result of accidental tragedy or spontaneous economic turmoil.
The Psychology of Brexit examines the psychological causes, catalysts, and consequences of Brexit