Roman Gerodimos is Professor of Global Current Affairs at Bournemouth University, UK, and a Faculty Member at the Salzburg Academy on Media & Global Change, Austria. His research focuses on the challenges facing democracy and global security, and on drivers of civic and global engagement. He is the co-editor of The Media, Political Participation and Empowerment (2013) and The Politics of Extreme Austerity: Greece in the Eurozone Crisis (2015). He has led research projects funded by NATO, the UK Department for International Development, the Independent Social Research Foundation, and the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He has also written, directed and produced four short films and a feature length documentary (Deterrence). Roman is the winner of the Political Studies Association's Arthur McDougall Prize for his research on youth civic engagement, and founder of the Greek Politics Specialist Group of the PSA.
Chapter 1. Introduction: An Interdisciplinary Application of Shame/Violence Theory (Roman Gerodimos)
Part I: Theoretical Underpinnings: The Origins of Shame
Chapter 2. Causes and Prevention of Violence: Shame and Guilt in the Individual and Society (James Gilligan)
Chapter 3. Shame, Gender and Radical Listening (Carol Gilligan in Conversation With Roman Gerodimos)
Chapter 4. Shame: An/other View: The Role of Shame in Misrepresenting Existential Anxiety (Louise Braddock)
Chapter 5. 'With the Humble is Wisdom': Humility as an Antidote to Humiliation and Shame (Barry Richards)
Part II: Breaking the Cycle: Perspectives from Practice
Chapter 6. Making Sense of Shame Feelings in Children and Young People with Developmental Trauma (Ioanna Tsimopoulou)
Chapter 7. Shame/Violence Intervention (SVI) (Jonathan Asser in Conversation With Roman Gerodimos)
Chapter 8. The Violence Intervention Project (VIP) (Charlie Rigby in Conversation With Roman Gerodimos)
Part III: Interdisciplinary Application: Greece as a Case Study of Shame/Violence
Chapter 9. Shame and Humiliation as Drivers of Violent Behaviour: A Psychodynamic Analysis of Greek Radical Voters (Lamprini Rori and Barry Richards)
Chapter 10. The "Deserved" Victimhood of Far-left Terrorism: Shame, Guilt and Status Reversal (Panayis Panagiotopoulos, Andriani Retzepi, Angelos Nastoulis)
Chapter 11. The Dynamics of Pride and Shame in Football Fandom: The Case of FC PAOK (Rosa Vasilaki)
Chapter 12. On the Skin of the City: The Shame/Violence Model as a Tool for Interpreting the Unauthorized 'Programmatic' Marking of Buildings in Modern Athens (Kostas Tsiambaos and Christos-Georgios Kritikos)
Chapter 13. Memory Landscapes and Stories of Shame: The Coexistence of Greece, Cyprus and Turkey as an Affective 'Mission Impossible' (Vicky Karaiskou)
Part IV: Bridging Divides: Shame in Global Current Affairs
Chapter 14. Shameful and Shameless: Projecting Triumph and Humiliation in the Brexit Era - A Psychosocial-Group Methodological Approach (Candida Yates and Iain MacRury)
Chapter 15. Living Beyond the Binary: Experiences of Shame and Violence in the Trans Community (Vasiliki Tsagkroni)
Chapter 16. Shame Awareness and Engagement with the Other in Times of Global Malaise: A Manifesto (Roman Gerodimos)