Twenty-five years of HIV: lessons for low prevalence scenarios. (49/112)

 (+info)

Gender, empowerment, and health: what is it? How does it work? (50/112)

 (+info)

Novel opportunities for computational biology and sociology in drug discovery. (51/112)

 (+info)

Individual and social influences on progression to daily smoking during adolescence. (52/112)

 (+info)

Short stature in a population-based cohort: social, emotional, and behavioral functioning. (53/112)

 (+info)

Considering population and war: a critical and neglected aspect of conflict studies. (54/112)

 (+info)

"In pursuit of the Nazi mind?" The deployment of psychoanalysis in the Allied struggle against Germany. (55/112)

This paper discusses how psychoanalytic ideas were brought to bear in the Allied struggle against the Third Reich and explores some of the claims that were made about this endeavour. It shows how a variety of studies of Fascist psychopathology, centered on the concept of superego, were mobilized in military intelligence, postwar planning and policy recommendations for "denazification." Freud's ideas were sometimes championed by particular army doctors and government planners; at other times they were combined with, or displaced by, competing, psychiatric and psychological forms of treatment and diverse studies of the Fascist "personality." This is illustrated through a discussion of the treatment and interpretation of the deputy leader of the Nazi Party, Rudolf Hess, after his arrival in Britain in 1941.  (+info)

Understanding systems and rhythms for minority recruitment in intervention research. (56/112)

 (+info)