Essays in Philosophy

Volume 18, Issue 2, July 2017

War and Moral Psychology

MaryCatherine McDonald
Pages 207-222

Haunted by a Different Ghost
Re-thinking Moral Injury

Cited by

  • Katinka Hooyer, Kalman Applbaum, Daniel Kasza. Journal of Humanistic Psychology. Altered States of Combat: Veteran Trauma and the Quest for Novel Therapeutics in Psychedelic Substances 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Erin Sugrue. Social Service Review. Understanding the Effect of Moral Transgressions in the Helping Professions: In Search of Conceptual Clarity 2019. [CrossRef]
  • Joshua T. Morris. Journal of Pastoral Theology. Veteran Solidarity and Antonio Gramsci: Counterhegemony as Pastoral Theological Intervention 2020. [CrossRef]
  • Kathryn Hurlock. Combat Stress in Pre-modern Europe 2022: 123. [CrossRef]
  • Hans Te Brake, Bart Nauta. Frontiers in Psychiatry. Caught between is and ought: The Moral Dissonance Model 2022. [CrossRef]
  • Mariam Kvitsiani, Maia Mestvirishvili, Khatuna Martskvishvili, Mariam Odilavadze. European Journal of Trauma & Dissociation. Dynamic model of moral injury 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Erin P. Sugrue. American Educational Research Journal. Moral Injury Among Professionals in K–12 Education 2020. [CrossRef]
  • James Griffith. Armed Forces & Society. War and Commitment to Military Service: Deployment and Combat Experiences Associated With Retention Among Army National Guard Soldiers 2022. [CrossRef]
  • Lara Jo Cox, Akeem Nassor Marsh. Not Just Bad Kids 2022: 155. [CrossRef]
There may be additional citations on Google Scholar.