ABSTRACT

You arrive at the location. From the information you've been given, an individual…or individuals… has taken at least three…or ten… people hostage. There are demands made, threats boasted, and a deadline given. With all of the hysteria surrounding the scene, how do you discern what is really going on, how do you know who you are dealing with - and just what his…or their…state of mind is?

Focusing on the psychological makeup and motivation of the
hostage taker, the victim, and the negotiator, Psychological Aspects of Crisis Negotiation equips those on the scene with vital information that allows for fast, safe, and accurate decision making. The author, a seasoned FBI agent and crisis negotiation instructor, divides the content of the book into five comprehensive, yet accessible parts.

The topics in Part I discuss negotiation basics: the traits and training necessary for success, the toll that stress takes on the negotiator, negotiation teams, and the effects of third-party involvement in the process. Part II describes how to react when dealing with suicidal hostage-takers, police-assisted suicide, and crisis negotiations in a correctional setting. It also explains how to negotiate with those who have personality disorders, what to say, and not to say, to each type.

Part III discusses situational indicators as they pertain to subject surrender and volatile negotiations that involve the violent and the suicidal. Group dynamics are explored in Part IV through examination of the incidents in Waco and Ruby Ridge. This section also includes creative criteria for constructive deviation from the guidelines of negotiation. Part V illustrates hostage issues such as the phases of a crisis, the Stockholm Syndrome, and what to communicate to a hostage.

While you never know what type of situation you are responding to, Psychological Aspects of Crisis Negotiation is an important resource to have with you at all times…just in case.

PART 1: BASIC CONCEPTS. The American Psychiatric Association. Characteristics of Effective Hostage
and Crisis Negotiators. Cross-Trained versus Cross-Qualified. Non-Law-Enforcement Negotiators. One on One Just Isn't Right. Stress and the Hostage or Crisis Negotiator.
PART II: DEALING WITH THE OTHER VICTIM. Negotiating with Normal People. Negotiating with the Adolescent Hostage Taker. Negotiating with the Inadequate Personality.
The Antisocial Personality Disorder (It's All About Me!) Hostage Taker. Negotiating with the Paranoid Schizophrenic
Hostage Taker. The Bipolar (I'm Focused and Flying High!)
Hostage Taker. The Suicidal Hostage Holder. Police-Assisted Suicide. Crisis Negotiations in the Correctional Setting. Negotiating with the Extremist. PART III: CRISIS RESOLUTION INDICATORS. Indicators of Subject Surrender.
Indicators of Volatile Negotiations. PART IV: GROUP DYNAMICS. Group Think. Creative Criteria for Constructive Deviation from Crisis Negotiation Guidelines. PART V: HOSTAGE ISSUES. Phases of a Hostage Crisis. The Stockholm Syndrome. What Do You Say to a Hostage?
INDEX.