Individualization in childhood and adolescence /

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: De Gruyter.
Group Author: Hurrelmann, Klaus; Neubauer, Georg.
Published: De Gruyter,
Publisher Address: Berlin ;Boston :
Publication Dates: [2012]
©1995
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Pr vention und intervention im kindes- und jugendalter ; 15
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110811001
http://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9783110811001.jpg
Carrier Form: 1 online resource (348pages).
ISBN: 9783110811001
Index Number: HQ783
CLC: C913.5
Contents: Frontmatter --
Contents --
Introduction: Comments on the Individualization Theorem --
Part 1. Theoretical Backgrounds --
The Role of Individualization Theory in Adolescent Socialization --
Childhood Between Individualization and Institutionalization --
Health Impairments in Adolescence: The Biopsychosocial "Costs" of the Modern Life-Style --
Part 2. Individualization and Politics --
Youth and Politics: Destabilization of Political Orientations --
The Syndrome of Right-Wing Extremism Among School Children: An East-West Comparison --
Are Girls Less Political Than Boys? Research Strategies and Concepts of Gender Studies Among 9 to 12-Year-Olds --
Part 3. Individualization and Relationship --
Individualized Life Plans and Concepts of Partnership During Adolescence --
"Kids'-Stuff Boys" and "Stuck-Up Little Madams": 13- to 16-Year-Olds in School and Peer Group --
Sexual Abuse in Childhood: Toward an Individual or Institutionalized Solution? --
Part 4. Individualization and Education --
Educational Perspectives and Psychosocial Problems of East German Adolescents --
Preschool Individualization: From an Authoritarian to a Consensus Mode of Motive Coordination --
Human Capital Theory and the Individualization Theorem --
Part 5. Individualization and Leisure --
Individualization and Youth Fashions --
Adolescent Consumption: Demonstration or Compensation? --
Sports and Social Integration During Adolescence --
Part 6. Individualization and Mass Media --
Individualization Processes in the Media Society --
The "Mediatization" of Childhood: Between Consumer Culture and Individuality