1st Edition

Family, Self, and Human Development Across Cultures Theory and Applications

By Cigdem Kagitcibasi Copyright 2017
    504 Pages
    by Routledge

    504 Pages
    by Routledge

    Çiğdem Kağıtçıbaşı's influential volume was a work of masterful scholarship and field-defining thought that challenged the existing assumptions in mainstream western psychology about the nature of individuals. During the past two decades since its publication, cultural and cross-cultural research and theory on the self, family, and human development have expanded greatly, developing fruitfully from the basic issues and paradigms Kağıtçıbaşı explored. This Classic Edition provides a critical assessment, consideration, and reflection of recent scholarship in this field. It brings this essential work up to date and appraises it in the light of current prevailing perspectives.

    Introduction to the Classic Edition  1. Introduction  Part 1. Human Development, Self, and Family in Cultural Context  2. Development in Context  3. Socialization for Competence  4. Culture, Self, and Individualism-Collectivism  5. Value of Children and the Family  6. Parenting and the Development of the Autonomous-Related Self  Part 2. Implications for Social Issues and Applications  7. Induced Change: The Role of Psychology  8. Intervention: Early Enrichment  9. The Turkish Early Enrichment Project (TEEP)  10. Immigration and Acculturation  11. Search for Integration and Policy Implications

    Biography

    Çigdem Kağıtçıbaşı is Professor in the Department of Psychology at Koç University.

    Praise for the previous edition: '…a tour de force of integration and synthesis, [this volume] is readable, informative, and accessible both to researchers in the field of cultural and cross-cultural psychology and to college and graduate students interested in a broader perspective regarding human development. … Kağıtçıbaşı has made a dramatic and valuable contribution to thinking about the individual, the family, and culture in both the Majority World and the West.' - PsycCRITIQUES