Bibliographic Information

The Psychology of grandparenthood : an international perspective

edited by Peter K. Smith

(International library of psychology)

Routledge, 1991

Available at  / 17 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Papers presented at the Third European Conference on Developmental Psychology, held at Budapest, June 1988, the Tenth Meeting of the International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development, held at Jyvaskyla, Finland, July 1989, and the Developmental Section Meeting of the British Psychological Society, held at Harlech, Wales, Sept. 1988

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The majority of people will now spend about one-third of their lives as grand-parents, yet developmental psychologists have largely ignored the nature of the grandparental role, and the influence which grandparents can have on grand-children. This book redresses the balance and uses life-span evolutionary and psychodynamic theoretical frameworks to provide a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon of grandparenthood from cross-cultural perspectives. Much recent work in developmental psychology has disregarded the extended family in favour of the two-generational nuclear family of parents and children. But grandparents do have a significant role in family relationships and children's development. This volume contains detailed discussion of intergenerational transmission of parenting skills, cooperation and conflict in three-generational families and the ways in which grandparents and grandchildren perceive one another. The importance of considering social and cultural contexts of development applies to grandparents just as much as to other areas of human development. Kinds of family structure, social policies regarding employment, health and housing, attitudes to marriage and even particular historical events all have an impact on the position and role of grand[parents and on stereotypes of old age. These factors vary considerably from country to country. Our understanding of grandparenthood can only be enriched by learning about the variety of ways in which it is expressed in difference cultural settings,. Most precious research has been confined to the USA. This book is truly international, containing contributions from Britain, Canada, Finland, Italy, The Netherlands, Poland, West Germany and the USA. International comparisons enable us to see which elements are essential to grandparenthood and which are culture-dependent. In most Western countries the population is ageing and this sort of study is becoming vitally important. The Psychology of Grandparenthood is required reading for anybody who is professional involved with the elderly and for psychologists interested in development, the life-span and family systems.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top