Although not themselves competing theories, because neither takes the other as its opposite, the two approaches can be understood to generate competing hypotheses about the process of legal socialization (Cohn & White, 1986). The two theories are compared in these terms....
We can see, therefore, that the factors of socialization, social environment, fam- ily (including differences in treatment of different members) and educational dif- ferences will all have an impact on personality. To these are added other factors such as race, ethnicity, culture, age and ...
A principled morality thus depends on socialization processes that meet it halfway by engendering the corresponding agencies of conscience, namely, the correlative superego formations. Aside from the weak motivating force of good reasons, such a morality becomes effective for action only through the ...
The Europeanization mechanisms of conditionality and socialization aimed at conflict settlement may have unintended effects which can undermine the objective of conflict resolution.doi:doi:http://dx.doi.org/Gergana NoutchevaNathalie TocciBruno Coppieters...
child language socialization patterns ‐ specific understandings about children, and childhoodstudy of local theories of child rearing ‐ central, to language socialization researchlocal theories, of childhood, child rearing ‐ order of acquisition, grammatical forms, speech acts...
E-learning is underway of its 3rd generation, incorporated by socialization, collaboration, project based learning, reflective practices via tools like wikis, blogs, portfolios, social bookmarking and networking, and online simulations (Connolly and Stansfield, 2007; Buzzetto, 2008). E-learning systems...
1. The theory of development of children’s personality before Judith Harris In 1983, two psychologists Eleanor Maccoby and John Martin advanced a critical view of the field of socialization research and they puzzled about what they discovered. They concluded that those findings imply strongly that ...
approach to the explanation ofindividual behavior: it is based on the assumption that uniformities of individual behavior in a given society can best be understood in terms of certain commonly accepted socialvalues, which most members of the society tend to internalize during their socialization ...