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      Linking social change and developmental change: shifting pathways of human development.

      Developmental Psychology
      Acculturation, Adolescent, Child, Cognition, Cultural Diversity, Culture, Educational Status, Emigrants and Immigrants, psychology, Human Development, Humans, Intergenerational Relations, Learning, Minority Groups, Parenting, Social Adjustment, Social Change, Social Environment, Social Values, Socioeconomic Factors, Urbanization

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          Abstract

          P. M. Greenfield's new theory of social change and human development aims to show how changing sociodemographic ecologies alter cultural values and learning environments and thereby shift developmental pathways. Worldwide sociodemographic trends include movement from rural residence, informal education at home, subsistence economy, and low-technology environments to urban residence, formal schooling, commerce, and high-technology environments. The former ecology is summarized by the German term Gemeinschaft ("community") and the latter by the German term Gesellschaft ("society"; Tönnies, 1887/1957). A review of empirical research demonstrates that, through adaptive processes, movement of any ecological variable in a Gesellschaft direction shifts cultural values in an individualistic direction and developmental pathways toward more independent social behavior and more abstract cognition--to give a few examples of the myriad behaviors that respond to these sociodemographic changes. In contrast, the (much less frequent) movement of any ecological variable in a Gemeinschaft direction is predicted to move cultural values and developmental pathways in the opposite direction. In conclusion, sociocultural environments are not static either in the developed or the developing world and therefore must be treated dynamically in developmental research.

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