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Changing Youth in a Changing Society: Patterns of Adolescent Development and Disorder
Harvard University Press, 1980 Cloth: 978-0-674-10875-2 Library of Congress Classification HQ796.R88 Dewey Decimal Classification 305.23
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Changing Youth in a Changing Society begins with a complete survey of the problems of youth, showing which disorders peak during the teenage years. With this background of fact firmly established, Michael Rutter turns to the difficult historical questions about whether adolescent disorders are truly becoming more frequent. Here Rutter shows that the news is not uniformly bad. Some psychosocial problems, such as teenage alcoholism and crime, are still on the rise. But other problems, among them the much heralded generation gap, turn out to be largely mythical. Still others, like the decline in educational achievement, may only reflect historical changes in the population of teenagers being assessed. See other books on: Adolescence | Adolescent Development | Adolescent psychology | Disorder | Patterns See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for The Family. Marriage. Women / The family. Marriage. Home / Youth. Adolescents. Teenagers:
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