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After
the jets hit the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September
11, we were hypnotized by the television images and devastated
by the immense destruction and the great loss of lives. Many
of us questioned whether our usual activities were worth doing
and wished that we could help. This special issue of Analyses
of Social Issues and Public Policy was conceived as a
way to be helpful to faculty teaching during these difficult
times, to their students, and to other readers by offering
them some of the ideas and research of psychologists who have
exper-tise in areas related to terrorism and its consequences.
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