Posts tagged Together Apart: The Psychology of COVID-19
Three Award-Winning Resources Underscore the Impact of Social Science Research

Believing that the social and behavioral sciences can make sense of the greatest challenges we face today, SAGE strives to publish cutting-edge research, support academics and researchers with big ideas, and provide freely accessible resources for the public. Recently, SAGE garnered accolades for three of these resources at the thirty-third annual APEX awards, winning a Grand Award for Together Apart: The Psychology of COVID-19, an Award of Excellence for the How to Get Published Webinar, and an Award of Excellence for the Structural Racism and Police Violence microsite.

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Collective Behavior Change is the Only Way We Can Stop the Spread of COVID-19

The idea that led us to write the book titled Together Apart: The Psychology of COVID-19 was a very simple one. We reasoned that while waiting for an effective vaccine or a medical treatment for COVID-19, all we can do to stop the spread of the virus is to change our behavior. And what is more, because of the contagious nature of COVID-19, it is not just “my” behavior, it is the behavior of all of “us”— of all the groups that we belong to, of all our communities, and of society at large —that needs to change so that we can effectively control the COVID-19 spread.

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The Psychology of COVID-19

“Unless or until a vaccine is developed, or we discover medicines to treat the virus, our means of controlling the spread of infection depend on behavioural changes and hence upon human psychology. … Indeed, all we can do to control the virus right now is get people to behave appropriately — to ‘do the right thing.’ … However, it is not enough to understand that we need psychology as a core part of efforts against COVID-19. It is also important to understand what sort of psychology helps or hinders in those efforts.”

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