|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
This book reviews and critiques the growing literature on youth
development under conditions of political violence and armed
conflict. It presents a robust framework, based in developmental
psychopathology, for evaluating current research on this topic for
strength of design, methodology, and documentation. Cross-sectional
and longitudinal studies from diverse regions and conflicts as well
as across disciplines examine risks and challenges as well as
resilience and coping as youth develop in unstable and threatening
environments. In addition, this book provides strategies for
designing and implementing prevention and intervention programs as
well as further opportunities for expanding applied research for
youth exposed to political violence and armed conflict. Topics
featured in this book include: Analysis of major research on
youths' normative and pathological development during political
violence and war. Guidelines for assessing research studies on the
impact of political violence and armed conflict on youth. The
effects of social ecology factors (e.g., family, school, and
community) on youth functioning. Post-traumatic stress disorder.
Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. Political Violence,
Armed Conflict, and Youth Adjustment is a must-have resource for
researchers, professors, clinicians/professionals, and graduate
students in the fields of child and school psychology, family
studies, and public health as well as developmental psychology,
child and adolescent psychiatry, political science, anthropology,
social and peace psychology, sociology, and ethnic studies.
Although there has been a significant increase in studies of stress
and coping processes in recent years, researchers have often
approached these topics from rather narrow and constrained
perspectives. Furthermore, little communication has occurred across
disciplines and research directions, resulting in the emergence of
several relatively isolated literatures. An outgrowth of the
Eleventh Biennial West Virginia University Conference on Life-Span
Development, this volume emphasizes two major themes: the
importance of taking a life-span approach to the study of stress
and coping, and the development of new and more complete conceptual
models of stress and coping processes. The first to approach these
subjects from a life-span perspective, this book includes papers by
distinguished researchers from each of the major periods of the
life-span, and brings together the cognitive and socioemotional
traditions in the study of dealing with pressures. The editors hope
that this facilitation of communication among researchers with
diverse views will help create a broadening and integration of
perspectives.
Although there has been a significant increase in studies of stress
and coping processes in recent years, researchers have often
approached these topics from rather narrow and constrained
perspectives. Furthermore, little communication has occurred across
disciplines and research directions, resulting in the emergence of
several relatively isolated literatures.
An outgrowth of the Eleventh Biennial West Virginia University
Conference on Life-Span Development, this volume emphasizes two
major themes: the importance of taking a life-span approach to the
study of stress and coping, and the development of new and more
complete conceptual models of stress and coping processes. The
first to approach these subjects from a life-span perspective, this
book includes papers by distinguished researchers from each of the
major periods of the life-span, and brings together the cognitive
and socioemotional traditions in the study of dealing with
pressures. The editors hope that this facilitation of communication
among researchers with diverse views will help create a broadening
and integration of perspectives.
This book reviews and critiques the growing literature on youth
development under conditions of political violence and armed
conflict. It presents a robust framework, based in developmental
psychopathology, for evaluating current research on this topic for
strength of design, methodology, and documentation. Cross-sectional
and longitudinal studies from diverse regions and conflicts as well
as across disciplines examine risks and challenges as well as
resilience and coping as youth develop in unstable and threatening
environments. In addition, this book provides strategies for
designing and implementing prevention and intervention programs as
well as further opportunities for expanding applied research for
youth exposed to political violence and armed conflict. Topics
featured in this book include: Analysis of major research on
youths' normative and pathological development during political
violence and war. Guidelines for assessing research studies on the
impact of political violence and armed conflict on youth. The
effects of social ecology factors (e.g., family, school, and
community) on youth functioning. Post-traumatic stress disorder.
Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. Political Violence,
Armed Conflict, and Youth Adjustment is a must-have resource for
researchers, professors, clinicians/professionals, and graduate
students in the fields of child and school psychology, family
studies, and public health as well as developmental psychology,
child and adolescent psychiatry, political science, anthropology,
social and peace psychology, sociology, and ethnic studies.
From leading researchers, this book presents important advances in
understanding how growing up in a discordant family affects child
adjustment, the factors that make certain children more vulnerable
than others, and what can be done to help. It is a
state-of-the-science follow-up to the authors' seminal earlier
work, "Children and Marital Conflict: The Impact of Family Dispute
and Resolution." The volume presents a new conceptual framework
that draws on current knowledge about family processes; parenting;
attachment; and children's emotional, physiological, cognitive, and
behavioral development. Innovative research methods are explained
and promising directions for clinical practice with children and
families are discussed.
This is the first time that Thomas Carlyle's remarkable The French
Revolution: A History has been published in a comprehensive
scholarly form. The edition features an abundance of new critical
features, including a critical text that presents the edition much
as it appeared in the first edition of 1837, but with a detailed
record of the emendations that Carlyle made in subsequent versions
during his lifetime. These volumes also contain a variety of
scholarly aids-literary, textual, historical, and photographic-to
render The French Revolution more approachable and readable to
twenty-first century readers. The edition takes seriously Carlyle's
claim to have produced a history of the Revolution that is rooted
in his primary French sources. The extensive annotations vividly
testify to his deep engagement in a wide array of histories,
pamphlets, memoirs, and biographies. The notes not only demonstrate
his complex method of history, but they also shed fresh light on
his artistry and his rich use of language. For the first time,
readers will be provided with numerous samples of engravings that
Carlyle used from Chamfort's Tableaux historiques and other sources
to visualize the 'Flame Drama,' as it was conceived by
revolutionary artists and printers. The appendices will also
include an annotated version of Carlyle's essay, 'On the Sinking of
the Vengeur' (1839), in which he offers a detailed response to
controversy surrounding the events that occurred during the naval
battle between France and Britain on 'the Glorious First of June,'
1794; an image and transcription of an unpublished MS holograph
excerpt from The French Revolution located in the Harry Ransom
Center, Texas; and a copy of a corrected proof of 'The Feast of
Pikes' held in the Forster Collection of the National Art Library,
Victoria and Albert Museum.
Developmental psychopathology seeks to unravel the complex
connections among biological, psychological, and social-contextual
aspects of normal and abnormal development. This volume presents
the principles of the field in an integrative, accessible manner.
The investigatory lens is focused on the primary context in which
children develop the family. Reviewing research in such areas as
attachment and parenting styles, marital functioning, and parental
depression, the volume examines how these variables may influence
developmental processes across a range of domains and, in turn,
predict the emergence of clinical problems. Illuminated are the
interplay of risk and protective factors, biological and contextual
influences, and continuous and discontinuous patterns of
development in childhood and adolescence. Also considered in depth
are the ways in which the developmental psychopathology perspective
points to new directions in diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of
child emotional and behavioural disorders. The volume features a
wealth of figures, tables, and illustrative vignettes.
This is the complete text of Brother Mark's Spiritual Diary for
2008. The Diary is a Christian devotional blog published at
www.brothermark.net. Topics covered in 2008 include the nature of
deeper Christian experiences, dealing with death, stress and rest,
and living as a stranger in exile.
This collection of original articles by leading specialists in
child development brings together work from diverse backgrounds and
disciplines to establish, for the first time, the importance of the
preschool period (eighteen months to four years)for parent-child
attachment relationships. Balancing theoretical, research-oriented,
and clinical papers, "Attachment in the Preschool Years" provides
valuable data and approaches for those working in a wide range of
fields, including developmental psychology and psychopathology,
child psychiatry, family therapy, pediatrics, nursing, and early
childhood education.
"There is a wealth of information and thought in this book; it does
not have a weak or uninteresting chapter, starting with the Preface
by Emde, and as a whole, it forms a sort of seminar."--John E.
Bates, "Contemporary Psychology"
In this timely collection, biological and behavioral scientists
address questions emerging from new research about the origins and
interconnections of altruism and aggression within and across
species. They explore the genetic underpinnings of affiliative and
aggressive orientations as well as the biological correlates of
these behaviors. They consider environmental variables - family
patterns, child rearing practices - that influence prosocial and
antisocial behaviors. And they examine internal processes such as
empathy, socio-inferential abilities, and cognitive attributions,
that regulate 'kindness' and 'selfishness'. The first section
focuses on biological, sociobiological, and ethological approaches.
It explores the utility of animal models for understanding both
human and infrahuman social behavior. The second section focuses on
the development, socialization, and mediation of altruism and
aggression in children. Several concerns underly both sections.
These include the role of attachment processes, separation
distress, reciprocal interchanges, and social play in determining
the quantity and quality of aggressive and affiliative
interactions; the function of emotions (e.g. empathy, guilt, and
anger) as instigators of altruism and aggression; and the nature of
sex differences. Several chapters present data on emotions that
mediate altruism and aggression and also on patterns of association
between prosocial and antisocial behaviors. The authors take an
ethological perspective, placing special importance on the need to
explore altruism and aggression in the real lives and natural
habitats of humans and other animals.
|
|