milieu control

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Noun

milieu control (uncountable)

  1. (idiomatic, linguistics) tactics that control environment and human communication through the use of peer pressure and group language.
    • 1962, DeVere Edwin Pentony, China, The Emerging Red Giant: Communist Foreign Policies, Chandler Pub. Co., →OCLC, page 237:
      This may be called milieu control. The Chinese Communist prison is probably the most thoroughly controlled and manipulated group environment that has ever existed.
    • 1969, John M. Phelan, Communications Control: Readings in the Motives and Structures of Censorship, Sheed and Ward, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 20:
      The milieu control exerted over the broader social environment of Communist China, while considerably less intense, is in its own way unrivalled in its combination of extensiveness and depth; it is, in fact, one of the distinguishing features of Chinese Communist practice.
    • 1994, Kevin Fauteux, The Recovery of Self: Regression and Redemption in Religious Experience, Paulist Press, →ISBN, page 26:
      Although milieu control is more obvious in the situation of a prisoner whose environment is forced on him, spiritual purgation often begins with a similar structuring of a person's physical environment.
    • 2000, Paul Kevin Wapner, Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, Richard A. Falk, Principled World Politics: The Challenge of Normative International Relations, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 233:
      The first is that of total milieu control — control of all information exchange and imagery in an environment that seeks to extend itself to internal controls of every kind.
    • 2006, Frank Kemp Salter, On Genetic Interests: Family, Ethnicity, and Humanity in an Age of Mass Migration, Transaction Publishers, →ISBN, page 199:
      A reliable system of indoctrination requires nearly total 'milieu control' in which the indoctrinatee has few or no alternate sources of information and values.
    • 2009, Barend Christoffel Labuschagne, Reinhard W. Sonnenschmidt, Religion, Politics and Law, Brill, →ISBN, page 399:
      The totalist administrators 'look upon milieu control as a just and necessary policy, one which need not be kept secret.' The assumption of 'omniscience' and 'ultimate truth' leads these administrators to consider it 'their duty to create an environment containing no more and no less than this 'truth''.
    • 2010, John Paul Healy, Yearning to Belong, Ashgate Publishing, →ISBN, page 40:
      'Milieu Control' involves the control of daily schedule including food intake, sleep, information and time and space for critical reflection.
    • 2012, Adam Piette, Mark Rawlinson, The Edinburgh Companion to Twentieth-century British and American War Literature, Edinburgh University Press, →ISBN, page 301:
      This kind of 'milieu control' can be brought about through coercion, but at its most successful it convinces individuals that they are acting autonomously — as is the case for the ex-POW Sergeant Raymond Shaw in The Manchurian Candidate. The result is that milieu control disrupts the 'balance between self and the outside world', resulting in 'a profound threat to [the individual's] personal autonomy'.
    • 2013, Martin Halliwell, Therapeutic Revolutions: Medicine, Psychiatry, and American Culture, 1945-1970, Rutgers University Press, →ISBN, page 102:
      This kind of 'milieu control' can be brought about through coercion, Lifton believed, but at its most successful it convinces the subject that he or she is acting spontaneously rather than being directed by values that are alien to the self.
    • 2013, Jeffrey Kaplan, Millennial Violence: Past, Present and Future, Routledge, →ISBN, page 213:
      In applying Erikson's totalism concept to the Thought Reform experiences of his subjects, Lifton famously identified eight 'themes' of the totalistic milieu: Milieu Control, i.e., monopoly of the spatial and informational environment.
    • 2013, Dennis Tourish, The Dark Side of Transformational Leadership: A Critical Perspective, Routledge, →ISBN, page 149:
      Such accounts are consistent with what Lifton described as 'milieu control', a key aspect of ideological totalism. As Lifton postulated it, this is primarily the use of techniques to dominate the person's contact with the outside world but also their communication with themselves.
    • 2014, Kamil Yilmaz, Disengaging from Terrorism – Global Lessons from the Turkish Penitents, Routledge, →ISBN, page 121:
      A second way in which milieu control is affects group members is linked to groups' conscious efforts in that regard. That is, the groups maintain milieu control especially by way of labeling recalcitrant members as 'subjective' or 'objective agent.' The former term is used for those who are thought to have harmed the organization by their mistakes or failures in groups' operations.