1st Edition

Development of Person-context Relations

Edited By Thomas A. Kindermann, Jaan Valsiner Copyright 1995
    268 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    268 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    Traditionally, developmental psychology has its focus on individuals. Developmentalists aim to describe regularities in individuals' change and development across time, to explain the processes and mechanisms that are involved in producing change and regularity, and eventually, to design strategies for optimization and modification of developmental pathways. Although the role of contexts has always been of central concern for these purposes, it is nevertheless quite surprising to note that compared to the effort devoted to individuals, relatively little attention has been paid to the study of the nature and organization of their contexts.

    This volume is an exploration of the idea that how we describe and explain human development will be closely tied to our understanding of what contexts are, how individuals and contexts become influential for one another, what contexts do to and with individuals, and how contexts and their influences change themselves across time. A major theme is whether the traditional dichotomy between individuals and their contexts may be artificial, perhaps culturally biased, and after psychologists have adhered to it for about a century, may have become an impediment to increasing our understanding of developmental processes.

    With this volume, the editors contribute a serious consideration of development and systematic change to emerging models of person-context relations, and provide suggestions about how it may be possible to incorporate these notions in developmental research and theorizing.

    Contents: T.A. Kindermann, J. Valsiner, Introduction: Individual Development, Changing Contexts, and the Co-Construction of Person-Context Relations in Human Development. Part I:Toward a Framework for the Study of Developing Person-Context Relations: Pragmatic, Theoretical, and Methodological Issues. R.M. Lerner, Developing Individuals Within Changing Contexts: Implications of Developmental Contextualism for Human Development Research, Policy, and Programs. W. Thorngate, Accounting for Person-Context Relations and Their Development. J. Valsiner, Processes of Development, and Search for Their Logic: An Introduction to Herbst's Co-Genetic Logic. D.P. Herbst, What Happens When We Make a Distinction: An Elementary Introduction to Co-Genetic Logic. Part II:Empirical Approaches to the Study of Developing Person-Context Relations. A. Claar, Understanding the Economic Framework: Children's and Adolescents' Conceptions of Economic Inequality. G. Trommsdorff, Person-Context Relations as Developmental Conditions for Empathy and Prosocial Action: A Cross-Cultural Analysis. A. von Eye, K. Kreppner, C. Spiel, H. Weßels, Life Events' Spacing and Order in Individual Development. M.L. Batchelder, Adolescents' Adaptation to Structural Changes in Family Relationships With Parental Divorce: A Combinatorial Model. T.A. Kindermann, Distinguishing "Buddies" From "Bystanders": The Study of Children's Development Within Natural Peer Contexts. T.A. Kindermann, J. Valsiner, Epilogue: Directions for the Study of Developing Person-Context Relations.

    Biography

    Edited by Kindermann, Thomas A.; Valsiner, Jaan

    "This volume focuses on the dynamic relations that exist bewteen individuals and their environment, and the impact of this interchange on human developmental processes."
    CHOICE

    "This volume represents an ambitious attempt to outline a developmental psychology for the 21st century, one more in tune with the manifold complexity of humans-changing-within- changing contexts.
    Contemporary Psychology