Publications

Sahar, G. (2023). Blame and political attitudes: The psychology of America’s culture war. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

O’Toole, M.J. & Sahar, G. (2014).  The effects of attributions for crime on attitudes toward prison reform.  Applied Psychology in Criminal Justice, 10, 46-65.

Sahar, G. (2014). On the importance of attribution theory in political psychology.  Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 8, 229-249.

Sahar, G. (2008). Patriotism, attributions for the 9/11 attacks and support for war:  Then and now.  Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 30, 1-9.

Sahar, G. & Karasawa, K. (2005).  Is the personal always political?  A cross-cultural analysis of abortion attitudes.  Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 27, 285-296.

Zucker, G.S. (nee Sahar) (1999).  Attributional and symbolic predictors of abortion attitudes.  Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 29, 1218-1245.

Zucker, G.S., (nee Sahar) & Karasawa, K. (1999).  Abortion attitudes among Japanese college students.  In T. Sugiman (Ed.), Progress in Asian Social Psychology, Vol. 2, (pp. 179-194).  Seoul, Korea:  Education Science Publisher.

Graham, S., Weiner, B. & Zucker, G.S. (nee Sahar) (1997).  An attributional analysis of punishment goals and public reactions to O.J. Simpson.  Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 23, 331-346.

Zucker, G.S. (nee Sahar) & Weiner, B. (1993).  Conservatism and perceptions of poverty:  An attributional analysis.  Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 23, 925-943.