Preface
Chapter 1: Adolescence as a Life Stage
Chapter 2: Personality Development in Adolescence
Chapter 3: Adolescents as Productive Processors of Reality
Chapter 4: The Developmental Task Qualifying
Chapter 5: The Developmental Task Bonding
Chapter 6: The Developmental Task Consumption
Chapter 7: The Developmental Task Participation
Chapter 8: Problems in Coping with Developmental Tasks
Bibliography
Klaus Hurrelmann is Senior Professor of Public Health and Education at Hertie School of Governance in Berlin, Germany. He established the Interdisciplinary Research Centre Prevention and Intervention in Childhood and Youth and was also co-founder of the Centre for Childhood and Youth Research in Bielefeld.
Gudrun Quenzel is Professor of Sociology of Education at the University of Education in Vorarlberg. Her research focuses on youth and socialisation as well as education poverty, education inequality, and health. She serves together with Klaus Hurrelmann on the management team of the German Shell Youth Studies.
The authors take an inter-disciplinary approach to describe the developmental tasks young people face in present-day Western societies, and how mastering them – or not – has repercussions for the rest of their lives. Development is not seen as an "unfolding" of personality, but as an active process, in which internal and external factors interact. With its highly structured content, the book becomes a kind of magnet that could attract social scientists, and those from other disciplines, towards better cohesive, collaborative, future action.Dr. paed. Marion Kloep, Professor Glamorgan University, Wales (retired)Leo B. Hendry, PhD, DLitt., FBPS, Emeritus Professor, University of Aberdeen, Scotland
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