Contents: K.R. Monroe, Political Psychology: An Overview. Part I:Political Psychology: An Overview of the Field. M. Deutsch, C. Kinnvall, What Is Political Psychology? M.G. Hermann, Political Psychology as a Perspective in the Study of Politics. D. Ward, Political Psychology: Origins and Development. J.A. Krosnick, K.M. McGraw, Psychological Political Science Versus Political Psychology True to Its Name: A Plea for Balance. G.E. Marcus, Political Psychology: A Personal View. J.G. Stein, Political Learning and Political Psychology: A Question of Norms. Part II:Political Psychology in Relation to Other Fields. S.A. Renshon, Lost in Plain Sight: The Cultural Foundations of Political Psychology. M. Crenshaw, The Utility of Political Psychology. W. Doise, C. Staerklé, From Social to Political Psychology: The Societal Approach. D. Bar-Tal, The (Social) Psychological Legacy for Political Psychology. C.F. Alford, Group Psychology Is the State of Nature. Part III:Special Areas of Application. S. Jackman, P.M. Sniderman, Institutional Organization of Choice Spaces: A Political Conception of Political Psychology. H. Lavine, On-Line Versus Memory-Based Process Models of Political Evaluation. D.O. Sears, Long-Term Psychological Consequences of Political Events. L. Huddy, Crossing the Methodological and Disciplinary Divide: Political Stability, Political Change, and Research Method. R. Jervis, Signaling and Perception: Drawing Inferences and Projecting Images. Part IV:Focus on the Future. P. Suedfeld, Postmodernism, Identity Politics, and Other Political Influences in Political Psychology. S. Rosenberg, Reconstructing Political Psychology: Current Obstacles and New Directions. R.E. Lane, Turning Political Psychology Upside Down. D.G. Winter, An Intellectual Agenda for Political Psychology. K.R. Monroe, A Paradigm for Political Psychology.