“…This “emotional turn” (Gold, , p. 114) or “new passion for emotion” (Baele, Sterck, & Meur, , p. 720) in international relations and conflict studies reflects a stepping away from a purely rational actor model that separated emotion from cognition and viewed the former as irrelevant or a hindrance (Lindner, ; Nair, ). Today emotions are seen as an integral part of cognitive processes and research has shown that their effect on conflict transformation can be positive or negative depending on how they are handled (Baele et al, ; Bar‐Tal, 2001; Behrendt & Ben‐Ari, 2012; Bodtker & Jameson, ; Halperin, ; Halperin, Pliskin, Saguy, Liberman, & Gross, ; Halperin, Russell, Dweck, & Gross, ; Jones, ; Maiese, ; Picard & Siltanen, ; Retzingel & Scheff, , Shapiro, , ).…”