In the late 1960s, after a period of intense acceleration of the
pace of research on human infancy, a number of investigators some
anthropologists, some psychologists, some psychiatrists and
paediatricians, and even a few ethologists developed the conviction
that certain contributions to the understanding of infancy would
come from, and perhaps only come from, cross-cultural and
cross-population studies.
This book, originally published in 1981, represents part of the
first fruit of that conviction, and its impressive range of
chapters justifies not only the belief itself but also the several
rationales behind it."
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