Books
- Barack Obama and the Politics of Redemption (Routledge, forthcoming 2011)
- National Security in the Obama Administration: Reassessing the Bush Doctrine (Routledge, 2009)
- The Bush Doctrine and the Future of American National Security Policy (Yale University Press 2008)
- Understanding the Bush Doctrine: Psychology and Strategy in an Age of Terrorism (Routledge Press 2007)
- The 50% American: National Identity in a Dangerous Age (2005)
- In his Father's Shadow: The Transformations of George W. Bush (Palgrave/Macmillan, 2004)
- Good Judgment in Foreign Policy: Theory and Research (Rowman and Littlefield 2002)
- America's Second Civil War: Political Leadership in a Divided Society (Transaction 2002)
- One America?: Political Leadership, National Identity, and the Dilemmas of Diversity (Georgetown University Press, 2001)
- Political Psychology: Cultural and Cross-cultural Foundations (Macmillan, 2000)
- High Hopes: The Clinton Presidency and the Politics of Ambition (New York University Press, 1996, updated paperback edition,1998 Routledge Press)
- The Psychological Assessment of Presidential Candidates (New York University Press, 1996, updated paperback edition,1998 Routledge Press)
- The Clinton Presidency: Campaigning, Governing and the Psychology of Leadership (Westview Press)
- The Political Psychology of the Gulf War (University of Pittsburgh Press)
- The Handbook of Political Socialization: Theory and Research (Free Press)
- Psychological Needs and Political Behavior (Free Press)
Read more about this topic: Stanley Renshon
Famous quotes containing the word books:
“In an extensive reading of recent books by psychologists, psychoanalysts, psychiatrists, and inspirationalists, I have discovered that they all suffer from one or more of these expression-complexes: italicizing, capitalizing, exclamation-pointing, multiple-interrogating, and itemizing. These are all forms of what the psychos themselves would call, if they faced their condition frankly, Rhetorical-Over-Compensation.”
—James Thurber (18941961)
“So far as I am individually concerned, & independent of my pocket, it is my earnest desire to write those sort of books which are said to fail.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)
“The trouble with most problem-solving books for parents is that they start with the idea that the child has a problem. Then they try to tell us how to fix the child, or else, after blaming the parent, they suggest how we can fix ourselves.”
—Polly Berrien Berends (20th century)