Childhood Aggression and Violence Sources of Influence, Prevention, and Control için kapak resmi
Childhood Aggression and Violence Sources of Influence, Prevention, and Control
Başlık:
Childhood Aggression and Violence Sources of Influence, Prevention, and Control
ISBN:
9781468451702
Edition:
1st ed. 1987.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1987.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XVIII, 299 p. online resource.
Series:
NATO Science Series B:, Physics
Contents:
I: Perspective -- 1. Childhood Aggression and Violence: Introduction -- II: Contemporary Themes -- 2. Childhood Aggression and Violence: Contemporary Issues -- 3. A Neurological View of Violence -- 4. Analyzing Response Relationships in Childhood Aggression: The Clinical Perspective -- 5. Potential Relations Between the Development of Social Reasoning and Childhood Aggression -- III: Familial and Societal Issues -- 6. Childhood Aggression in The Context of Family Interaction -- 7. Child Maltreatment: Prevalence, Consequences, Causes, and Interventions -- 8. Girls and Violence: An Exploration of the Gender Gap in Serious Delinquent Behavior -- 9. Familial, Peer, and Television Influences on Aggressive and Violent Behavior -- 10. Aggression and its Correlates over 22 Years -- 11. Etiology and Prevention of Antisocial Behavior in Children and Adolescents -- IV: Overview -- 12. Childhood Aggression and Violence: Individual and System Approaches.
Abstract:
The conference on which this volume is based was one of a series of symposia initiated by the Department of Psychology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa on the theory and research surrounding topics of interest to the faculty and germane to the Hawaiian community. In order to encourage interaction around specific themes, the symposium series has assembled a small, select group of scholars to exchange knowledge, ideas, and enthusiasm with the resident faculty, students, and the community at large. The first two symposia concentrated on cross-cultural themes (Marsella, Tharp, & Ciborowski, 1979; Marsella, DeVos, & Hsu, 1985). The third one addressed a significant social problem: aggression and violence in children. At the time that our plan was being developed, Hawaii, along with mainland states, was experiencing or at least expressing widespread alarm over the involvement of children and youth in violent crime, in belligerence at school, as perpetrators of aggression at home, and as victims of physical abuse. This symposium was planned around a major area within the department, the Clinical Studies Program. The Clinical Studies Program has developed along two interrelated lines of concentration: one emphasized the foundation of clin­ cical psychology in basic science and the other expanded its purview into the broader community, covering prevention, systems change, and social networks.
Dil:
English