International Crises and Their Psychological Repercussions on Iraqi Society

Authors

  • Dr. Noor Ali Al-Kinani Author

Keywords:

International Crises, Psychological Repercussions, Iraqi Society, Psychological Security, Psychology of Crisis Management.

Abstract

The end of the Cold War was considered a new era in the history of international relations, this era had characterized by the reconstruct of many concepts that had existed since the oldest of mankind. These new concepts have giving the priority in social and psychological issues due to their connection to international crises. Among the huge amount of these concepts, we find the term of "Crisis", which is one of the most frequently term used terms in our current era, this are can be described as the era of crises. No transitional or revolutionary society has witnessed crises and changes like this country has witnessed, I mean "Iraq". Crises perhaps can be read as a political, social, or material shocks that disappear and recede by virtue of decisions, habituation, or political flirtation, or finding mechanisms for strategies (changing the attention). Violence in Iraq has not subsided, and has not settleddown on the impact of political radicalism, the crises of terrorism, the creation of street chaos, and the sectarian, and regional discourse that blew up. It is like if Iraq has become daily filled with violence-breaking news.

Author Biography

  • Dr. Noor Ali Al-Kinani

    Al-Iraqia University

    College of Education for Women / Media Psychology

     

Downloads

Published

2026-06-27

How to Cite

International Crises and Their Psychological Repercussions on Iraqi Society. (2026). Enki for Humanities and Social Sciences, 1(2). http://journal.enke.iq/index.php/enki/article/view/181

Similar Articles

1-10 of 63

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.