Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-77f85d65b8-9nbrm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-04-17T12:45:12.673Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part III - Lifespan Development in Diverse Sociocultural Contexts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2025

Edward Lowe
Affiliation:
Soka University of America
Get access

Information

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Book purchase

Temporarily unavailable

References

References

Ainsworth, M. S. and Bowlby, J.. 1991. “An Ethological Approach to Personality Development.” American Psychologist, 46(4): 333341. https://doi.org/10.1037/0003-066X.46.4.333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Astuti, R. 1998. “‘It’s a Boy,’ ‘It’s a Girl!’: Reflections on Sex and Gender in Madagascar and Beyond.” In Bodies and Persons: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia, edited by Lambek, M., and Strathern, A., 2952. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Australian Law Reform Commission. 2017. Pathways to Justice – Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples. Final Report No 133. www.alrc.gov.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/final_report_133_amended1.pdf.Google Scholar
Bacchiddu, G. 2012. “Reticent Mothers, Motherly Grandmothers and Forgotten Fathers: The Making and Unmaking of Kinship in Apiao Chiloé.” Tellus, 23: 3558.Google Scholar
Bakeman, R., Adamson, L. B., Konner, M., and Barr, R. G.. 1990. “!Kung Infancy: The Social Context of Object Exploration.” Child Development, 61(3): 794809. https://doi.org/10.2307/1130964.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barlow, K. 2013. “Attachment and Culture in Murik Society: Learning Autonomy and Interdependence through Kinship Food and Gender.” In Attachment Reconsidered: Cultural Perspectives on a Western Theory, edited by Quinn, N. and Mageo, J. M., 165188. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrios, R. E. 2017. “What Does Catastrophe Reveal for Whom? The Anthropology of Crises and Disasters at the Onset of the Anthropocene.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 46(1): 151166. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102116-041635.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beck, S. and Knecht, M.. 2016. “‘Crisis’ in Social Anthropology: Rethinking a Missing Concept.” In The Handbook of International Crisis Communication Research, edited by Schwarz, A., Seeger, M. W., and Auer, C., 5665. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bloch, M. 1993. “Zafimaniry Birth and Kinship Theory.” Social Anthropology, 1(1b): 119132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowlby, J. 1969 [1982]. Attachment. Vol. I of Attachment and Loss. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Bowlby, J. 1973. Separation: Anxiety and Anger. Vol. II of Attachment and Loss. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Bowlby, J. 1980. Loss: Sadness and Depression. Vol. III of Attachment and Loss. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Braga, A. G. M. and Angotti, B.. 2015. “From Hyper-Maternity to Hypo-Maternity in Women’s Prisons in Brazil.” SUR: International Journal on Human Rights, 22: 221234.Google Scholar
Bretherton, I. 1992. “The Origins of Attachment Theory: John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth.” Developmental Psychology, 28(5): 759775. https://doi.org/10.1037/0012-1649.28.5.759.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breuer, E., Remond, M., Lighton, S., Passalaqua, J., Galouzis, J., Stewart, K.-A., and Sullivan, E.. 2021. “The Needs and Experiences of Mothers while in Prison and Post-release: A Rapid Review and Thematic Synthesis.” Health Justice, 9: 31. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40352-021-00153-7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carrithers, M., Collins, S., and Lukes, S., eds. 1985. The Category of the Person: Anthropology Philosophy History. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Christoffersen‐Deb, A. 2012. “Viability: A Cultural Calculus of Personhood at the Beginnings of Life.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 26(4): 575594. https://doi.org/10.1111/maq.12008.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Codoceo, F., Ampuero, F., and Perez, C.. 2016. Criminalización de la Pobreza: La Construcción Política del Sujeto Peligroso. Osorno: Universidad de Los Lagos.Google Scholar
Cohen, D., Hoshino-Browne, E., and Leung, A. K. Y.. 2007. “Culture and the Structure of Personal Experience: Insider and outsider Phenomenologies of the Self and Social World.” Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 39: 167. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0065-2601(06)39001-6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conklin, B. A. and Morgan, L. M.. 1996. “Babies, Bodies, and the Production of Personhood in North America and a Native Amazonian Society.” Ethos, 24(4): 657694.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Course, M. 2011. Becoming Mapuche: Person and Ritual in Indigenous Chile. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunha, M. 2014. “The Ethnography of Prisons and Penal Confinement.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 43: 217233. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102313-030349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Das, V. 1993. “Sociological Research in India: The State of Crisis.” Economic and Political Weekly, 28(23): 11591161.Google Scholar
Das, V. 2006. Life and Words: Violence and the Descent into the Ordinary. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis-Floyd, R., Gutschow, K., and Schwartz, D. A.. 2020. “Pregnancy Birth and the Covid-19 Pandemic in the United States.” Medical Anthropology, 39(5): 413427.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Degnen, C. 2018. Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Personhood and the Life Course. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeLoache, J. S. and Gottlieb, A.. 2000. A World of Babies: Imagined Childcare Guides for Seven Societies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowler, C. 2020. “Introduction: Intersecting Crises.” In “Intersecting Crises,” edited by C. Dowler, American Ethnologist website. https://tinyurl.com/nabza4mz.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. 1986. Essays on Individualism: Modern Ideology in Anthropological Perspective. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Einarsdóttir, J. 2005. Tired of Weeping. Mother Love Child Death and Poverty in Guinea-Bissau. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Everett, D. L. 2014. “Concentric Circles of Attachment among the Pirahã: A Brief Survey.” In Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need, edited by Otto, H. and Keller, H., 169186. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferraro, K. and Moe, A.. 2003. “Mothering Crime and Incarceration.” Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, 32(1): 940. https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241602238937.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gottlieb, A. 2000. “Where Have All the Babies Gone? Toward an Anthropology of Infants (and Their Caretakers).Anthropological Quarterly, 72(3): 121132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gottlieb, A. 2004. The Afterlife Is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Gottlieb, A. 2014. “Luring Your Child into This Life: A Being Path for Infant Care.” In A World of Babies: Imagined Childcare Guides for Seven Societies, edited by Deloache, J. S. and Gottlieb, A., 5590. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Granja, R., da Cunha, M. I. P., and Machado, H.. 2015. “Mothering from Prison and Ideologies of Intensive Parenting: Enacting Vulnerable Resistance.” Journal of Family Issues, 36(9): 12121232. https://doi.org/10.1177/0192513X14533541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenhouse, C. J., Mentz, E., and Warren, K. B.. 2002. Ethnography in Unstable Places: Everyday Lives in Contexts of Dramatic Political Change. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hairston, C. F. 2007. Focus on Children with Incarcerated Parents: An Overview of the Research Literature. Baltimore, MD: Annie E. Casey Foundation.Google Scholar
Hallowell, A. I. 1955. Culture and Experience. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, G. G. 1989. “Concepts of Individual Self and Person in Description and Analysis.” American Anthropologist, 91(3): 599612.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holland, D. 1992. “Emotion Work and the Value of Emotional Equanimity among the Toraja.” Ethnology, 31(1): 4556. https://doi.org/10.2307/3773441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howard, A. 1985. “Ethnopsychology and the Prospects for a Cultural Psychology.” In Person Self and Experience, edited by Kirkpatrick, G. M. and White, J., 401420. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Hrdy, S. B. 2009. Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Jenkins, G. L. and Inhorn, M. C.. 2003. “Reproduction Gone Awry: Medical Anthropological Perspectives.” Social Science & Medicine, 56(9): 18311836.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jordan, B. 1992. Birth in Four Cultures: A Crosscultural Investigation of Childbirth in Yucatan, Holland, Sweden, and the United States. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press.Google Scholar
Kagitcibasi, C. 2005. “Autonomy and Relatedness in Cultural Context: Implications for Self and Family.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 34: 403422. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022105275959.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kärtner, J., Keller, H., and Chaudhary, N.. 2010. “Cognitive and Social Influences on Early Prosocial Behavior in Two Sociocultural Contexts.” Developmental Psychology, 46(4): 905. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0019718.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keller, H. 2016. “Psychological Autonomy and Hierarchical Relatedness as Organizers of Developmental Pathways.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B: Biological Sciences, 371: 20150070. https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0070.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keller, H. and Bard, K. A.. 2017. The Cultural Nature of Attachment: Contextualizing Relationships and Development. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, H. and Kärtner, J.. 2013. “Development: The Cultural Solution of Universal Developmental Tasks.” In Advances in Culture and Psychology, edited by Gefland, M. J., Chiu, C.-Y., and Hong, Y.-Y., 63116. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kramer, K. L. and Veile, A.. 2018. “Infant Allocare in Traditional Societies.” Physiology & Behavior, 193: 117126. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.02.054.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lancy, D. F. 2012. “Children’s Work and Apprenticeship.” In Childhood Studies, edited by Montgomery, H. K.. Oxford: Oxford Bibliographies Online. https://doi.org/10.1093/OBO/9780199791231-0007.Google Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2014a. The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs Chattel Changelings, 2nd ed. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2014b. “‘Babies Aren’t Persons’: A Survey of Delayed Personhood.” In Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need, edited by Keller, H. and Otto, H., 66110. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Landsman, G. 2009. Reconstructing Motherhood and Disability in the Age of Perfect Babies. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Layne, L. 2021. “‘Personhood’ in the Anthropology of Reproduction.” In The Routledge Handbook of Anthropology and Reproduction, edited by Han, S. and Tomoro, C., 323338. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2014. “Attachment Theory as Cultural Ideology.” In Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need, edited by Otto, H. and Keller, H., 5065. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mageo, J. M. 2013. “Toward a Cultural Psychodynamics of Attachment: Samoa and US Comparisons.” In Attachment Reconsidered: Cultural Perspectives on a Western Theory, edited by Quinn, N. and Mageo, J. M., 191214. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markus, H. R. and Kitayama, S.. 1991. “Culture and the Self: Implications for Cognition Emotion and Motivation.” Psychological Review, 98(2): 224253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathambo, V. and Gibbs, A.. 2009. “Extended Family Childcare Arrangements in a Context of AIDS: Collapse or Adaptation?AIDS Care, 21(S1): 2227. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540120902942949.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mauss, M. 1979 [1938]. “A Category of the Human Mind: The Notion of the Person; The Notion of ‘Self.’” In Sociology and Psychology: Essays by Marcel Mauss. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mauss, M. 1985. “A Category of the Human Mind: The Notion of Person; The Notion of Self.” In The Category of the Person: Anthropology Philosophy History, edited by Carrithers, M., Collins, S., and Lukes, S., 125. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McCausland, R. and Baldry, E.. 2017. “Understanding Women Offenders in Prison.” In The Routledge International Handbook of Forensic Psychology in Secure Settings, edited by Fisher, M., Gredecki, N., Ireland, C. A., and Ireland, J. L., 2539. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McIntosh, J. 2018. “Personhood, Self, and Individual.” In The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology, edited by Callan, H., 19. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.Google Scholar
Meehan, C. L. 2014. “Allomothers and Child Well-Being.” In Handbook of Child Well-Being: Theories, Methods, and Policies in Global Perspective, edited by Ben-Arieh, A., Casas, F., Frones, I., and Korbin, J., 17871816. Dordrecht: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meehan, C. L. and Hawks, S.. 2013. “Cooperative Breeding and Attachment among the Aka Foragers.” In Attachment Reconsidered: Cultural Perspectives on a Western Theory, edited by Quinn, N. and Mageo, J. M., 85113. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mehtta, M. 2020. “A New Crisis and an Old Conversation: Reflections on Quotidian Care in the Sundarbans.” In “Intersecting Crises,” edited by C. Dowler, American Ethnologist website. https://tinyurl.com/yey8p3j3/.Google Scholar
Michelet, A. 2015. “Why are Mongolian Infants Treated Like ‘Kings’? Care Practices and Multifaceted Personhood of Young Children in the Middle Gobi (Mongolia).” Inner Asia, 17(2): 273292. https://doi.org/10.1163/22105018-12340045.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikulincer, M. and Shaver, P.. 2007. Attachment in Adulthood: Structure Dynamics and Change. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G. 2015. “The Evolution of Attachment Theory and Cultures of Human Attachment in Infancy and Early Childhood.” In The Oxford Handbook of Human Development and Culture: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, edited by Jensen, L. A., 149164. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G., Bard, K., Chaudhary, N., Gottlieb, A., Keller, H., Murray, M., Quinn, N., Rosabal-Coto, M., Scheidecker, G., Takada, A., and Vicedo, M.. 2018. “Bringing the Real World into Developmental Science: A Commentary on Weber Fernald and Diop (2017).” Child Development, 89(6): e594e603. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.12882.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morelli, G., Chaudhary, N., Gottlieb, A., Keller, H., Murray, M., Quinn, N., Rosabal-Coto, M., Schedecher, G., Takada, A., and Vicedo, M.. 2017. “Taking Culture Seriously: A Pluralistic Approach to Attachment.” In The Cultural Nature of Attachment: Contextualizing Relationships and Development, edited by Bard, K. and Keller, H., 139169. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G., Henry, P. I., and Foerster, S.. 2014. “Relationships and Resource Uncertainty.” In Ancestral Landscapes in Human Evolution: Culture Childrearing and Social Wellbeing, edited by Navaez, D., Valentino, K., Fuentes, A., McKenna, J. J., and Gray, P., 69103. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morelli, G. and Lu, L.. 2021. “Pluralities and Commonalities in Children’s Relationships.” In Attachment: The Fundamental Questions, edited by Thompson, R. A., Simpson, J. A., and Berlin, L. J., 237243. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G. A., Rogoff, B., and Angelillo, C.. 2003. “Cultural Variation in Young Children’s Access to Work or Involvement in Specialised Child-Focused Activities.” International Journal of Behavioral Development, 27(3): 264274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, M. and Tizzoni, C.. 2022. “Raising Children in Hostile Worlds in Santiago De Chile: Optimism and ‘Hyper-Agentic’ Mothers.” The Sociological Review, 70(1): 92107. https://doi.org/10.1177/00380261211056169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Narotzky, S. and Besnier, N.. 2014. “Crisis Value and Hope: Rethinking the Economy: An Introduction to Supplement 9.” Current Anthropology, 55(S9): S4S16. https://doi.org/10.1086/676327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ocen, P. A. 2012. “Punishing Pregnancy: Race, Incarceration, and the Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners.” California Law Review, 100(5): 12391311.Google Scholar
Ochs, E. and Schieffelin, B. B.. 1984. “Language Acquisition and Socialization: Three Developmental Stories.” In Culture Theory: Essays on Mind Self and Emotion, edited by Schweder, R. and LeVine, R., 276320. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Packer, M. 2017. Child Development: Understanding A Cultural Perspective, 1st ed. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Platenkamp, J. 2010. “Becoming a Lao Person: Rituals of Birth and Socialization in Luang Prabang Laos.” In The Anthropology of Values Essays in Honour of Georg Pfeffer, edited by Berger, P., Hardenberg, R., and Pfeffer, G., 180200. Delhi: Pearson.Google Scholar
Pyysiäinen, J. 2021. “Sociocultural Affordances and Enactment of Agency: A Transactional View.” Theory & Psychology, 31(4): 491512. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354321989431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinlan, C. 2019. “Motherhood and Social Exclusion: Narratives of Women in Prison in Ireland.” In Motherhood and Social Exclusion, edited by Byvelds, C. and Jackson, H., 91110. Bradford: Demeter Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinn, J. R. 2005. “Tried and True: The Role of Informal Mechanisms in Transitional Justice.” International Society of Political Psychology Annual Meeting, Toronto.Google Scholar
Quinn, N. 2003. “Cultural Selves.” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1001(1): 145176.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rabain-Jamin, J. 1994. “Language and Socialization of the Child in African Families Living in France.” In Cross-Cultural Roots of Minority Child Development, edited by Greenfield, P. M. and Cocking, R. R., 150169. New York: Routledge and CRC Press.Google Scholar
Reyes-García, V., Balbo, A. L., Gómez-Baggethun, E., Gueze, M., Mesoudi, A., Richerson, P., Rubio-Campillo, X., Ruiz-Mallén, I., and Shennan, S.. 2016. “Multilevel Processes and Cultural Adaptation: Examples from Past and Present Small-Scale Societies.” Ecology and Society: A Journal of Integrative Science for Resilience and Sustainability, 21(4): 2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rogoff, B. 2003. The Cultural Nature of Human Development. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rothbaum, F., Morelli, G., and Rusk, N.. 2011. “Attachment Learning and Coping: The Interplay of Cultural Similarities and Differences.” In Advances in Culture and Psychology, edited by Gelfand, M. J., Chiu, C.-Y., and Hong, Y.-Y., 153215. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. 1993. Death without Weeping: The Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil. Berkley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sear, R. and Mace, R.. 2008. “Who Keeps Children Alive? A Review of the Effects of Kin on Child Survival.” Evolution and Human Behavior, 29(1): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seymour, S. C. 2013. “‘It Takes a Village to Raise a Child’: Attachment Theory and Multiple Child Care in Alor Indonesia and in North India.” In Attachment Reconsidered, edited by Quinn, N. and Mageo, J. M., 115139. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shonkoff, J. P. 2017. “Breakthrough Impacts: What Science Tells Us about Supporting Early Childhood Development.” YC Young Children, 72(2): 816.Google Scholar
Shweder, R. A. and Bourne, E. J.. 1984. “Does the Concept of the Person Vary Cross-Culturally?” In Culture Theory: Essays on Mind Self and Emotion, edited by Shweder, R. A. and LeVine, R. A., 158199. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sufrin, C. 2018. “Making Mothers in Jail: Carceral Reproduction of Normative Motherhood.” Reproductive Biomedicine & Society Online, 7: 5565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thompson, R. A. 2006. “The Development of the Person: Social Understanding Relationships Conscience Self.” In Handbook of Child Psychology: Social Emotional and Personality Development, edited by Eisenberg, N., Damon, W., and Lerner, R. M., 2498. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.Google Scholar
Tsing, A. L. 2015. The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Tubex, H. and Cox, D.. 2020. “Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women in Australian Prisons.” In Neo-Colonial Injustice and the Mass Imprisonment of Indigenous Women, edited by George, L., Norris, A. N., Deckert, A., and Tauri, J., 133154. London: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, V. 1969. The Ritual Process. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Varnum, M. E. W. and Grossmann, I.. 2017. “Cultural Change: The How and the Why.” Perspectives on Psychological Science: A Journal of the Association for Psychological Science, 12(6): 956972. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691617699971.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vignoles, V. L., Owe, E., Becker, M., Smith, P. B., Easterbrook, M. J., Brown, R., Gonzalez, R., Didier, N., Carrasco, D., Cadena, M. P., and Lay, S.. 2016. “Beyond the ‘East–West’ Dichotomy: Global Variation in Cultural Models of Selfhood.” Journal of Experimental Psychology, 145(8): 9661000. https://doi.org/10.1037/xge0000175.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Visacovsky, S. E. 2017. “When Time Freezes: Socio-Anthropological Research on Social Crises.” Ibero-Americana, 46(1): 616. https://doi.org/10.16993/iberoamericana.103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voas, M. 2018. “Tiny Graves: Mortality, Health, and Personhood in the Early Stages of Life.” Society, 55(1): 349355. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12115-018-0267-5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wacquant, L. 2014. “Class, Race and Hyperincarceration in Revanchist America.” Daedalus, 139(3): 7490. https://doi.org/10.1080/08854300.2014.954926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, H. 2012. Under a Watchful Eye: Self Power and Intimacy in Amazonia. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Weinfield, N. S., Sroufe, L. A., Egeland, B., and Carlson, E.. 2008. “Individual Differences in Infant–Caregiver Attachment: Conceptual and Empirical Aspects of Security.” In Handbook of Attachment: Theory Research and Clinical Applications, edited by Cassidy, J. and Shaver, P. R., 78101. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S., Gallimore, R., Bacon, M. K., Barry, H., Bell, C., Novaes, S. C., Edwards, C. P., Goswami, B., Minturn, L., and Nerlove, S. B.. 1977. “My Brother’s Keeper: Child and Sibling Caretaking [and Comments and Reply].” Current Anthropology, 18(2): 169190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. and Lowe, E. D.. 2005. “Globalization Childhood and Psychological Anthropology.” In A Companion to Psychological Anthropology: Modernity and Psychocultural Change, edited by Weisner, T. S. and Lowe, E. D., 315336. Oxford: Blackwell.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, G. M. and Kirkpatrick, J.. 1985. Person, Self, and Experience: Exploring Pacific Ethnopsychologies. Berkley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wilson, M., Jones, J., and Gilles, M.. 2014. “The Aboriginal Mothers in Prison Project: An Example of How Consultation Can Inform Research Practice.” Australian Aboriginal Studies, 2: 2839.Google Scholar

References

Axia, V. D. and Weisner, T. S.. 2002. “Infant Stress Reactivity and Home Cultural Ecology of Italian Infants and Families.” Infant Behavior and Development, 25(3): 255268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barlow, K. 2010. “Sharing Food, Sharing Values: Mothering and Empathy in Murik Society.” Ethos, 38(4): 339353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barlow, K. and Chapin, B. L.. 2010. “Impetus for the Special Issue: Mothering in the Field.” Ethos, 38(4): 321323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breitkreuz, R., Colen, K., and Horne, R.. 2021. “Producing the Patchwork: The Hidden Work of Mothers in Organizing Child Care.” Journal of Family Studies, 27(3): 436459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Briggs, J. L. 1970. Never in Anger: Portrait of an Eskimo Family. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Cassaniti, J. L. and Menon, U.. 2017. Universalism Without Uniformity: Explorations in Mind and Culture. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapin, B. L. 2014. Childhood in a Sri Lankan Village: Shaping Hierarchy and Desire. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Chapin, B. L. 2018. “Learning about Culture from Children: Lessons from Rural Sri Lanka.” In Advances in Culture Theory from Psychological Anthropology, edited by Quinn, N., 185209. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chavajay, P. and Rogoff, B.. 2002. “Schooling and Traditional Collaborative Social Organization of Problem Solving by Mayan Mothers and Children.” Developmental Psychology, 38(1): 55.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Daley, T. C., Weisner, T., and Singhal, N.. 2014. “Adults with Autism in India: A Mixed-Method Approach to Make Meaning of Daily Routines.” Social Science and Medicine, 116: 142149.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
D’Andrade, R. G. and Strauss, C.. 1992. Human Motives and Cultural Models. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasen, P. R. 2003. “Theoretical Frameworks in Cross-Cultural Developmental Psychology: An Attempt at Integration.” In Cross-Cultural Perspectives in Human Development: Theory, Research, and Applications, edited by Saraswathi, T. S., 128165. New Delhi: Sage India.Google Scholar
Dasen, P. R. 2022. “Culture and Cognitive Development.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 53(7–8): 789816.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeCaro, J. A. and Worthman, C. M.. 2007a. “Cultural Models, Parent Behavior, and Young Child Experience in Working American Families.” Parenting: Science and Practice, 7: 177203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeCaro, J. A. and Worthman, C. M.. 2007b. “Return to School Accompanied by Changing Associations Between Family Ecology and Cortisol.” Developmental Psychobiology, 50: 183195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de León, L. 2019. “Playing at Being Bilingual: Bilingual Performances, Stance, and Language Scaling in Mayan Tzotzil Siblings’ Play.” Journal of Pragmatics, 144: 92108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duncan, G., Huston, A. C., and Weisner, T. S.. 2007. Higher Ground: New Hope for the Working Poor and Their Children. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
Edwards, C. P. and Whiting, B. B.. 2004. Ngecha: A Kenyan Village in a Time of Rapid Social Change. Lincoln: University of Nebraska.Google Scholar
Gallimore, R., Goldenberg, C. N., and Weisner, T. S.. 1993. “The Social Construction and Subjective Reality of Activity Settings: Implications for Community Psychology.” American Journal of Community Psychology, 21(4): 537560.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gallimore, R., Weisner, T. S., Kaufman, S. Z., and Bernheimer, L. P.. 1989. “The Social Construction of Ecocultural Niches: Family Accommodation of Developmentally Delayed Children.” American Journal on Mental Retardation, 94: 216230.Google ScholarPubMed
Garcia, C., Greenfield, P. M., Navarro-Hernández, A. M., Colorado-García, J., and Vidaña-Rivera, T. M. 2021. “Cooperative Play and Globalized Social Change: Mexican Children Are Less Cooperative In 2017 than in 1967.” Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology, 2: 100003. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cresp.2020.100003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaskins, S. 2013. “Pretend Play as Culturally Constructed Activity.” In The Oxford Handbook of the Development of Imagination, edited by Taylor, M., 224247. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gaskins, S. 2015. “Childhood Practices across Cultures: Play and Household Work.” In The Oxford Handbook of Human Development and Culture: An Interdisciplinary Perspective, edited by Jensen, L. A., 185197. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gauvain, M. and Munroe, R. L.. 2012. “Cultural Change, Human Activity, and Cognitive Development.” Human Development, 55(4): 205228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gauvain, M. and Munroe, R. L.. 2014. “Development of Perspective Taking in Relation to Age, Education, and the Presence of Community Features Associated with Industrialization: A Four-Culture Study.” Cross-Cultural Research, 48(1): 3244.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gauvain, M. and Munroe, R. L.. 2019. “Children’s Experience During Cultural Change.” Child Development Perspectives, 13(1): 6570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, M. H. 2002. “Exclusion in Girls’ Peer Groups: Ethnographic Analysis of Language Practices on the Playground.” Human Development, 45(6): 392415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, M. H. and Kyratzis, A.. 2014. “Language and Gender in Peer Interactions among Children and Youth.” In The Handbook of Language, Gender, and Sexuality, edited by Erhlich, S., Meyerhoff, M., and Holmes, J., 509528. New York: Wiley-Blackwell.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goyal, N., Wice, M., Aladro, A., Kallberg-Shroff, M., and Miller, J.G.. 2019. “Culture and the Development of Views of Agency: Perspectives from Storybooks, Parents, and Children.” Developmental Psychology, 55: 10961110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gottlieb, A. 2015. The Afterlife Is Where We Come From. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Gottlieb, A. and Deloache, J.. 2017. A World of Babies: Imagined Childcare Guides for Eight Societies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Greenfield, P. M. 1997. “Culture as Process: Empirical Methods for Cultural Psychology.” In Handbook of Cross-Cultural Psychology, Volume 2, edited by Berry, J. W., Dasen, P., and Saraswathi, T., 301346. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.Google Scholar
Greenfield, P. M. 2000. “Three Approaches to the Psychology of Culture: Where Do They Come From? Where Can They Go?Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 3(3): 223240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenfield, P. M. 2009. “Linking Social Change and Developmental Change: Shifting Pathways of Human Development.” Developmental Psychology, 45: 401.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenfield, P. M., Brown, G., and Du, H.. 2021. “Shifts in Ecology, Behavior, Values, and Relationships during the Coronavirus Pandemic: Survival Threat, Subsistence Activities, Conservation of Resources, and Interdependent Families.” Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology, 2: 100017.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenfield, P. M., Maynard, A. E., and Childs, C. P.. 2003. “Historical Change, Cultural Learning, and Cognitive Representation in Zinacantec Maya Children.” Cognitive Development, 18(4): 455487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C. M.. 1983. “The Cultural Construction of Child Development: A Framework for the Socialization of Affect.” Ethos, 11(4): 221231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C. M.. 1992. “Parental Ethnotheories in Action.” In Parental Belief Systems: The Psychological Consequences for Children, edited by Sigel, I. E., McGillicuddy-DeLisi, A. V., and Goodnow, J. J., 373392. New York: Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C. M.. 2020. “Culture and Human Development: Where Did It Go? And Where Is It Going?New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 173: 101119. https://doi.org/10.1002/cad.20378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C. M.. 2021. “Why Understanding Culture Is Essential for Supporting Children and Families.” Applied Developmental Science, 25: 1425. https://doi.org/10.1080/10888691.2020.1789354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harkness, S., Super, C. M., Bermudez, M. R., Moscardino, U., Rha, J. H., Mavridis, C. J., Bonichini, S., Huitrón, B., Welles-Nyström, B., Palacios, J., Hyun, O., Soriano, G., and Zylicz, P. O.. 2009. “Parental Ethnotheories of Children’s Learning.” In The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood, edited by Lancy, D., Bock, P., and Gaskins, S., 6581. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira.Google Scholar
Huston, A. C. 2005. “Mixed Methods in Studies of Social Experiments for Parents in Poverty.” In Discovering Successful Pathways in Children’s Development: Mixed Methods in the Study of Childhood and Family Life, edited by Weisner, T. S., 305325. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hrdy, S. B. 1999. Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species. New York: Ballantine Books.Google Scholar
Keller, H. 2007. Cultures of Infancy. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.Google Scholar
Keller, H. 2018. “Universality Claim of Attachment Theory: Children’s Socioemotional Development across Cultures.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115(45): 1141411419.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keller, H. 2021. The Myth of Attachment Theory. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, H., Abels, M., Lamm, B., Yovsi, R. D., Voelker, S., and Lakhani, A.. 2005. “Ecocultural Effects on Early Infant Care: A Study in Cameroon, India, and Germany.” Ethos, 33(4): 512541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, H. and Bard, K. A., eds. 2017. The Cultural Nature of Attachment: Contextualizing Relationships and Development. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirmayer, L. J., Worthman, C. M., Kitayama, S., Lemelson, R., and Cummings, C. A.. 2020. Culture, Mind, and Brain: Emerging Concepts, Models, and Applications. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konner, M. 2010. The Evolution of Childhood: Relationships, Emotion, Mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Kyratzis, A. and Guo, J.. 2001. “Preschool Girls’ and Boys’ Verbal Conflict Strategies in the United States and China.Research on Language and Social Interaction, 34(1): 4574.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2008. The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2014. “‘Babies Aren’t Persons’: A Survey of Delayed Personhood.” In Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need, edited by Otto, H. and Keller, H., 66109. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2017. Raising Children: Surprising Insights from Other Cultures. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2018. Anthropological Perspectives on Children as Helpers, Workers, Artisans, and Laborers. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F., Bock, P. A., and Gaskins, S., eds. 2010. The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira.Google Scholar
Lavelli, M., Carra, C., Rossi, G., and Keller, H.. 2019. “Culture-Specific Development of Early Mother–Infant Emotional Co-regulation: Italian, Cameroonian, and West African Immigrant Dyads.” Developmental Psychology, 55(9): 18501867.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
LeVine, R. A. 1998. “Child Psychology and Anthropology: An Environmental View.” In Biosocial Perspectives on Children, edited by Panter-Brick, C., 102130. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2007. “Ethnographic Studies of Childhood: A Historical Overview.” American Anthropologist, 107(2): 247260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2010. “Plasticity and Variation: Cultural Influences on Parenting and Early Child Development Within and Across Populations.” In Formative Experiences, edited by Worthman, C. M., Plotsky, P. M., Schechter, D. S., and Cummings, C. A., 1135. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2018. “Towards a Cultural Developmental Science: Discussion by Robert A. LeVine.” Developmental Review, 50: 110111.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2021. “An Anthropology of Childhood: Re-examining Margaret Mead’s Approach to Child Development.” In The Cultural Psyche: The Selected Papers of Robert A. Levine on Psychosocial Science, edited by Sharma, D., 5360. New York: Information Age Publishing.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A., Caron, J., and New, R.. 1980. “Anthropology and Child Development.” New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 8: 7186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A., Dixon, S., LeVine, S., Richman, A., Leiderman, P. H., Keefer, C. H., and Brazelton, T. B.. 1994. Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and LeVine, S. E.. 2001. “The Schooling of Women: Maternal Behavior and Child Environments.” Ethos, 29(3): 259270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A., LeVine, S., and Schnell, B.. 2001. “‘Improve the Women’: Mass Schooling, Female Literacy, and Worldwide Social Change.” Harvard Educational Review, 71(1): 151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and Miller, P. M.. 1990. “Cross-Cultural Validity of Attachment Theory.” Human Development, 33(1): 7380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and New, R. S., eds. 2008. Anthropology and Child Development: A Cross-Cultural Reader, vol. 3. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and Norman, K.. 2001. “The Infant’s Acquisition of Culture: Early Attachment Reexamined in Anthropological Perspective.” In The Psychology of Cultural Experience, edited by Moore, C. C. and Mathews, H. F., 83104. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lowe, E. D. and Weisner, T. S.. 2004. “‘You Have to Push It – Who’s Gonna Raise Your Kids?’: Situating Child Care and Child Care Subsidy Use in the Daily Routines of Lower Income Families.” Children And Youth Services Review, 26(2): 143171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manago, A. M., Greenfield, P. M., Kim, J. L., and Ward, L. M.. 2014. “Changing Cultural Pathways through Gender Role and Sexual Development: A Theoretical Framework.” Ethos, 42(2): 198221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard, A. E. 2002. “Cultural Teaching: The Development of Teaching Skills in Zinacantec Maya Sibling Interactions.” Child Development, 73(3): 969982.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard, A. E. 2004. “Cultures of Teaching in Childhood: Formal Schooling and Maya Sibling Teaching at Home.” Cognitive Development, 19(4): 517535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard, A. E. 2005. “Activity Settings Analysis of Changing Cultural Practices in Developmental Psychology.” In Behavior and Change: Theory, Research, and Practical Application, edited by O’Donnell, C. and Yamauchi, L., 4162. New York: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Maynard, A. E. and Greenfield, P. M.. 2003. “Implicit Cognitive Development in Cultural Tools and Children: Lessons from Maya Mexico.” Cognitive Development, 18(4): 489510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard, A. E., Greenfield, P. M., and Childs, C. P.. 2015. “Developmental Effects of Economic and Educational Change: Cognitive Representation in Three Generations Across 43 Years in a Maya Community.” International Journal of Psychology, 50(1): 1219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard, A. E., Greenfield, P. M., Childs, C. P., and Weinstock, M.. 2023. “Social Change, Apprenticeship, and Development: Changes in the Apprenticeship and Learning of Maya Backstrap Loom Weaving Over 42 Years.” Applied Developmental Science, 28(1): 82–10. https://doi.org/10.1080/10888691.2022.2151445.Google Scholar
McConnell, D. and Savage, A.. 2015. “Stress and Resilience Among Families Caring for Children with Intellectual Disability: Expanding the Research Agenda.” Current Developmental Disorders Reports, 2(2): 100109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mead, M. 1928. Coming of Age in Samoa. New York: Morrow.Google Scholar
Mead, M. 1934. “The Use of Primitive Material in the Study of Personality.” Journal of Personality, 3(1): 316. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6494.1934.tb01979.x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minks, A. 2013. Voices of Play: Miskitu Children’s Speech and Song on the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G. A., Chaudhary, N., Gottlieb, A., Keller, H., Murray, M., Quinn, N., Rosabal-Coto, M., Scheidecker, G., Takada, A., and Vicedo, M.. 2017. “Taking Culture Seriously: A Pluralistic Approach to Attachment.” In The Cultural Nature of Attachment: Contextualizing Relationships and Development, vol. 22, edited by Keller, H. and Bard, K. A., 139169. New York: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Morelli, G., Quinn, N., Chaudhary, N., Vicedo, M., Rosabal-Coto, M., Keller, H., Murray, M., Gottlieb, A., Scheidecker, G., and Takada, A.. 2018. “Ethical Challenges of Parenting Interventions in Low- to Middle-Income Countries.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 49(1): 524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nsamenang, A. B. and Tchombé, T. M., eds. 2011. Handbook of African Educational Theories and Practices: A Generative Teacher Education Curriculum. Bamenda: Human Development Research Center/Presses Universitaires d’Afrique.Google Scholar
Ochs, E. and Izquierdo, C.. 2009. “Responsibility in Childhood: Three Developmental Trajectories.” Ethos, 37(4): 391413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Otto, H. and Keller, H., eds. 2014. Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, H., Twenge, J. M., and Greenfield, P. M.. 2014. “The Great Recession: Implications for Adolescent Values and Behavior.” Social Psychological and Personality Science, 5(3): 310–-318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piker, S. 1998. “Contributions of Psychological Anthropology.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 29(1): 931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinn, N. 2005. “Universals of Child Rearing.” Anthropological Theory, 5: 477516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quinn, N. and Mageo, J., eds. 2013. Attachment Reconsidered: Cultural Perspectives on a Western Theory. Cham: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rindstedt, C. 2001. Quichua Children and Language Shift in an Andean Community: School, Play and Sibling Caretaking. Linköping: Linköping University.Google Scholar
Rindstedt, C. and Aronsson, K.. 2002. “Growing up Monolingual in a Bilingual Community: The Quichua Revitalization Paradox.” Language in Society, 31(5): 721742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B. 1990. Apprenticeship in Thinking: Cognitive Development in Social Context. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B. 1997. “Evaluating Development in the Process of Participation: Theory, Methods, and Practice Building on Each Other.” In Change and Development: Issues of Theory, Method, and Application, edited by Amsel, E. and Renninger, K. A., 265285. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B. 2003. The Cultural Nature of Human Development. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B. 2014. “Learning by Observing and Pitching in to Family and Community Endeavors: An Orientation.” Human Development, 57(2–3): 6981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B. and Angelillo, C.. 2002. “Investigating the Coordinated Functioning of Multifaceted Cultural Practices in Human Development.” Human Development, 45(4): 211225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B., Correa-Chávez, M., and Cotuc, M. N.. 2005. “A Cultural/Historical View of Schooling in Human Development.” In Developmental Psychology and Social Change: Research, History and Policy, edited by Pillemer, D. B. and White, S. H., 225263. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511610400.011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B., Correa-Chávez, M., and Silva, K. G.. 2011. “Cultural Variation in Children’s Attention and Learning.” In Psychology and the Real World: Essays Illustrating Fundamental Contributions to Society, edited by Gernsbacher, M. A. E., Pew, R. W., Hough, L. M., and Pomerantz, J. R., 154163. New York: Worth Publishers.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B., Sellers, M. J., Pirrotta, S., Fox, N., and White, S. H.. 1975. “The Age of Assignment of Roles and Responsibilities to Children: A Cross-Cultural Survey.” Human Development, 18(5): 353369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Röttger-Rössler, B., Scheidecker, G., Jung, S., and Holodynski, M.. 2013. “Socializing Emotions in Childhood: A Cross-Cultural Comparison between the Bara in Madagascar and the Minangkabau in Indonesia.” Mind, Culture, and Activity, 20(3): 260287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saxe, G. B. 2017. “Conceptual Change: A Cultural–Historical and Cognitive–Developmental Framework.” In Converging Perspectives on Conceptual Change: Mapping an Emerging Paradigm in the Learning Sciences, edited by Amin, T. G. and Levrini, O., 5160. New York: Routledge/Taylor and Francis Group.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheidecker, G. 2023. “Parents, Caregivers, and Peers: Patterns of Complementarity in the Social World of Children in Rural Madagascar.” Current Anthropology, 64(3). https://doi.org/10.1086/725037.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. 1992. Death Without Weeping: The Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schieffelin, B. B. and Ochs, E.. 1986. “Language Socialization.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 15: 163191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlegel, A. 1994. “Cross-Cultural Comparisons in Psychological Anthropology.” In Handbook of Psychological Anthropology, edited by Bock, P. K., 1939. New York: Praeger Publishers/Greenwood Publishing Group.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. and Barry, H.. 1991. Adolescence: An Anthropological Inquiry. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. and Hewlett, B. L.. 2011. “Contributions of Anthropology to the Study of Adolescence.” Journal of Research on Adolescence, 21(1): 281289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmidt, W. J., Keller, H., and Rosabal Coto, M.. 2021. “Development in Context: What We Need to Know to Assess Children’s Attachment Relationships.” Developmental Psychology, 57(12): 22062219.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Serpell, R. and Nsamenang, A. B.. 2014. “Locally Relevant and Quality ECCE Programmes: Implications of Research on Indigenous African Child Development and Socialization.” In Early Childhood Care and Education Working Papers Series, 3: ED.2013/WS/38. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0022/002265/226564e.pdf.Google Scholar
Seymour, S. C. 1999. Women, Family, and Child Care in India: A World in Transition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Seymour, S. C. 2004. “Multiple Caretaking of Infants and Young Children: An Area in Critical Need of a Feminist Psychological Anthropology.” Ethos, 32(4): 538556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seymour, S. C. 2013. “‘It Takes a Village to Raise a Child’: Attachment Theory and Multiple Child Care in Alor, Indonesia, and in North India.” In Attachment Reconsidered, edited by Quinn, N. and Mageo, J., 115139.New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shore, B. 2002. “Taking Culture Seriously.” Human Development, 45(4): 226228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shweder, R., Goodnow, J., Hatano, G., LeVine, R., Markus, H., and Miller, P.. 2006. “The Cultural Psychology of Development: One Mind, Many Mentalities.” In Handbook of Child Development, Volume 1: Theoretical Models of Human Development, 6th ed., edited by Damon, W. and Lerner, R. M., 716792. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.Google Scholar
Shweder, R. A., Bidell, T. R., Dailey, A. C., Dixon, S., Miller, P. J., and Modell, J., eds. 2009. The Child: An Encyclopedic Companion. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skinner, D., Holland, D., and Pach, A.. 1998. “Selves in Time and Place: An Introduction.” In Selves in Time and Place: Identities, Experience, and History in Nepal, edited by Skinner, D., Pach, A., and Holland, D., 318. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Small, M. F. 1998. Our Babies, Ourselves: How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parent. New York: Anchor.Google Scholar
Strauss, C. and Quinn, N.. 1997. A Cognitive Theory of Cultural Meaning. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Super, C. M., Blom, M., Harkness, S., Ranade, N., and Londhe, R.. 2021. “Culture and the Organization of Infant Sleep: A Study in the Netherlands and the USA.” Infant Behavior and Development, 64: 101620. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.infbeh.2021.101620.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Super, C. M. and Harkness, S.. 1986. “The Developmental Niche: A Conceptualization at the Interface of Child and Culture.” International Journal of Behavioral Development, 9(4): 545569.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Super, C. M. and Harkness, S.. 2013. “Culture and Children’s Sleep.” In The Oxford Handbook of Infant, Child, and Adolescent Sleep and Behavior, edited by Wolfson, A. R. and Montgomery-Downs, H. E., 8198. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Super, C. M., Harkness, S., Barry, O., and Zeitlin, M.. 2011. “Think Locally, Act Globally: Contributions of African Research to Child Development.” Child Development Perspectives, 5(2): 119125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Takada, A. 2020. The Ecology of Playful Childhood. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tobin, J. J., Wu, D. Y. U., and Davidson, D. H.. 1989. Preschool in Three Cultures: Japan, China, and the United States. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Tovote, K. E. and Maynard, A. E.. 2018. “Maya Children Working in the Street: Value Mismatches from the Village to the Street Setting.” International Journal of Psychology, 53: 3443.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Q. 2018. “Towards a Cultural Developmental Science: Introduction to the Special Issue.” Developmental Review, 50: 14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weinstock, M., Ganayiem, M., Igbaryia, R., Manago, A. M., and Greenfield, P. M.. 2015. “Societal Change and Values in Arab Communities in Israel.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 46(1): 1938. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022114551792.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 1984. “A Cross-Cultural Perspective: Ecocultural Niches of Middle Childhood.” In The Elementary School Years: Understanding Development During Middle Childhood, edited by Collins, A., 335369. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 1996. “Why Ethnography Should Be the Most Important Method in the Study of Human Development.” In Ethnography and Human Development: Context and Meaning in Social Inquiry, edited by Jessor, R., Colby, A., and Shweder, R., 305324. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 1997. “Support for Children and the African Family Crisis.” In African Families and the Crisis of Social Change, edited by Weisner, T. S., Bradley, C., and Kilbride, P., 2044. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press/Bergin and Garvey.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2002. “Ecocultural Understanding of Children’s Developmental Pathways.” Human Development, 45(4): 275281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S., ed. 2005. Discovering Successful Pathways in Children’s Development: Mixed Methods in the Study of Childhood and Family Life. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2011. “The Ecocultural Family Interview: New Conceptualizations and Uses for the Study of Illness.” In Sviluppo e salute del bambino: Fattori individuali, sociali e culturali (Papers in Honor of Vanna Axia), edited by Bonichini, S. and Baroni, M. R., 166180. Padua: University of Padova Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T.S. 2014. “The Socialization of Trust: Plural Caregiving and Diverse Pathways in Human Development Across Cultures.” In Different Faces of Attachment: Cultural Variations on a Universal Human Need, edited by Otto, H. and Keller, H., 263277. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2015. “Childhood: Anthropological Aspects.” In International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, vol. 3, 2nd ed., edited by Wright, J. D., 451458. New York: Elsevier.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2018a. “Psychological Anthropology and the Study of Disability.” In Autism in Translation: An Intercultural Conversation on Autism Spectrum Condition, edited by Fein, E. and Rios, C., 263281. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2018b. “Culture, Context, and the Integration of Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in the Study of Human Development.” In Handbook of Advances in Culture and Psychology, vol. 7, edited by Gelfand, M., Chiu, C. Y., and Hong, Y. Y., 153213. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. and Gallimore, R.. 1977. “My Brother’s Keeper: Child and Sibling Caretaking.” Current Anthropology 18: 169190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. and Hay, M. C.. 2015. “Practice to Research: Integrating Evidence-Based Practices with Culture and Context.” Transcultural Psychiatry, 52: 222243.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weisner, T. S. and Lowe, E. D.. 2005. “Globalization, Childhood, and Psychological Anthropology.” In A Companion to Psychological Anthropology: Modernity and Psychocultural Change, edited by Casey, C. and Edgerton, R., 315336. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S., Matheson, C., Coots, J., and Bernheimer, L. P.. 2005. “Sustainability of Daily Routines as a Family Outcome.” In Learning in Cultural Context, edited by Maynard, A. E. and Martini, M. I., 4173. Cham: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiting, B. B. 1963. Six Cultures: Studies of Child Rearing. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Whiting, B. B. 1996. “The Effect of Social Change on Concepts of the Good Child and Good Mothering: A Study of Families in Kenya.” Ethos, 24(1): 335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiting, B. B., Chesaina, C., Diru, G., Ichoya, J., Kariuki, P. W., Kimani, V. N., Kamau, I., Maina, R., Munge-Kagia, W., Mwangi, J., and Whiting, J. W. M.. 2004. “Changing Concepts of the Good Child and Good Mothering.” In Ngecha: A Kenyan Village in a Time of Rapid Social Change, edited by Edwards, C. P. and Whiting, B. B., 119151. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Worthman, C. M. 2010. “The Ecology of Human Development: Evolving Models for Cultural Psychology.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 41(4): 546562.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worthman, C. M., Plotsky, P. M., Schechter, D. S., and Cummings, C. A.. 2010. Formative Experiences: The Interaction of Caregiving, Culture, and Developmental Psychobiology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yoshikawa, H., Weisner, T. S., and Lowe, E. D., eds. 2006. Making it Work: Low-Wage Employment, Family Life and Child Development. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
Zeng, R. and Greenfield, P. M.. 2015. “Cultural Evolution over the Last 40 Years in China: Using the Google Ngram Viewer to Study Implications of Social and Political Change for Cultural Values.” International Journal of Psychology, 50(1): 4755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zukow, P. G. 1989. Sibling Interaction Across Cultures. Cham: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

References

Anderson, W. W. and Anderson, D. D.. 1986. “Thai Muslim Adolescents’ Self, Sexuality, and Autonomy.” Ethos, 14(4): 368394.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Anderson-Fye, E. P. 2003. “Never Leave Yourself: Ethnopsychology as Mediator of Psychological Globalization among Belizean Schoolgirls.” Ethos, 31(1): 5994.Google Scholar
Anderson-Fye, E. P. and Floersch, J.. 2011. “I’m Not Your Typical ‘Homework Stresses Me Out’ Kind of Girl: Psychological Anthropology in Research on College Student Usage of Psychiatric Medications and Mental Health Services.” Ethos, 39(4): 501521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aparicio, A. 2007. “Contesting Race and Power: Second-Generation Dominican Youth in the New Gotham.” City & Society, 19(2): 179201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arvizu, S. 2009. “Creating Alternative Visions of Arab Society: Emerging Youth Publics in Cairo.” Media Culture & Society, 31(3): 385407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aunger, R. 2000. “The Life History of Culture Learning in a Face-to-Face Society.” Ethos, 28(3): 445481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, H. and Schlegel, A.. 1980. “Early Childhood Precursors of Adolescent Initiation Ceremonies.” Ethos, 8: 132145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, H. and Schlegel, A., 1990. Adolescence. HRAF Research Series in Quantitative Cross-Cultural Data, vol. IV. New Haven, CT: Human Relations Area Files Press.Google Scholar
Bhardwaj, A., Bourey, C., Rai, S., Adhikari, R. P, Worthman, C. M., and Kohrt, B. A.. 2018. “Interpersonal Violence and Suicidality among Former Child Soldiers and War-Exposed Civilian Children in Nepal.” Global Mental Health, 5: e9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Boas, F. 1916. “The Origin of Totemism.” American Anthropologist, 18: 319326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borman, K. M. 1988. “Playing on the Job in Adolescent Work Settings.” Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 19(2): 163181CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bragg, S., Kehily, M. J., and Buckingham, D., eds. 2014. Youth Cultures in the Age of Global Media (Studies in Childhood and Youth). New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Brown, B. B. and Larson, R. W.. 2002. “The Kaleidoscope of Adolescence: Experiences of the World’s Youth at the Beginning of the 21st Century.” In The World’s Youth: Adolescence in Eight Regions of the Globe, edited by Brown, B. B., Larson, R. W., and Saraswathi, T. S., 120. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, B. B., Larson, R. W., and Saraswathi, T. S., eds. 2002. The World’s Youth: Adolescence in Eight Regions of the Globe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, R. A., Hruschka, D. J., and Worthman, C. M.. 2009. “Cultural Models and Fertility Timing among Cherokee and White Youth in Appalachia: Beyond the Mode.” American Anthropologist, 111(4): 420431.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brown, R. A., Rehkopf, D. H., Copeland, W. E., Costello, E. J., and Worthman, C. M.. 2009. “Life Course Priorities among Appalachian Emerging Adults: Revisiting Wallace’s Organization of Diversity.” Ethos, 37(2): 225242.Google Scholar
Bucholtz, M. 2002. “Youth and Cultural Practice.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 31: 525552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burbank, V. K. 1988. Aboriginal Adolescence: Maidenhood in an Australian Community. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Burbank, V. K. 1995. “Gender Hierarchy and Adolescent Sexuality: Control of Female Reproduction in an Australian Aboriginal Community.” Ethos, 23(1): 3346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burton, L. 1997. “Ethnography and the Meaning of Adolescence in High-Risk Neighborhoods.” Ethos, 25(2): 208217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chase, S. A. 2008. Perfectly Prep: Gender Extremes at a New England Prep School. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chua, J. L. 2014. In Pursuit of the Good Life: Aspiration and Suicide in Globalizing South India. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Clarkin, P. F. 2019. “The Embodiment of War: Growth, Development, and Armed Conflict.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 48: 423442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, Y. 1966. “On Alternative Views of the Individual in Culture and Personality Studies.” American Anthropologist, 68(2): 355361.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, Y. 1964. The Transition from Childhood to Adolescence: Cross-Cultural Studies of Initiation Ceremonies, Legal Systems and Incest Taboos. Chicago, IL: Aldine Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Coleman, E. G. 2010. “Ethnographic Approaches to Digital Media.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 39: 487505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, J. 2009. “Social Reproduction in Classrooms and Schools.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 38: 3348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Condon, R. G. 1987. Inuit Youth: Growth and Change in the Canadian Arctic. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Condon, R. G. 1995. “The Rise of the Leisure Class: Adolescence and Recreational Acculturation in the Canadian Artic.” Ethos, 23(1): 4768.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, S. E. 2004. “New Technologies and Language Change: Toward an Anthropology of Linguistic Frontiers.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 33: 103115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csordas, T. J. 2009. “Growing Up Charismatic: Morality and Spirituality among Children in a Religious Community.” Ethos, 37(4): 414440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csordas, T. J. and Jenkins, J. H.. 2018. “Living with a Thousand Cuts: Self-Cutting, Agency, and Mental Illness among Adolescents.” Ethos, 46(2): 206229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, S. S. and Davis, D. A. 1989. Adolescence in a Moroccan Town: Making Social Sense. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Davis, D. L. and Whitten, R. G.. 1987. “The Cross-Cultural Study of Human Sexuality.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 16: 6998CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickson-Gómez, J. 2003. “Growing up in Guerilla Camp: The Long-Term Impact of Being a Child Solider in El Salvador’s Civil War.” Ethos, 30(4): 327356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dole, C. and Csordas, T. J.. 2003. “Trials of Navajo Youth: Identity, Healing, and the Struggle for Maturity.” Ethos, 31(3): 357384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolson, M. S. 2015. “By Sleight of Neoliberal Logics: Street Youth, Workfare, and the Everyday Tactics of Survival in London, Ontario, Canada.” City & Society, 27(2): 116135.Google Scholar
Edwards, C. P. 2000. “Children’s Play in Cross-Cultural Perspective: A New Look at the Six Cultures Study.” Cross Cultural Research., 34: 318338CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ember, M. 1965. “The Transition from Childhood to Adolescence: Cross-Cultural Studies of Initiation Ceremonies, Legal Systems and Incest Taboos (Book Review).” American Anthropologist, 67(4): 10391040.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ember, C. R., Pitek, E., and Ringen, E. J.. 2017. “Adolescence.” HRAF: Explaining Human Culture. https://hraf.yale.edu/ehc/summaries/adolescence.Google Scholar
Erikson, E. 1963 [1950]. Childhood and Society, 2nd ed. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Erikson, E. 1980 [1959]. Identity and the Life Cycle. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Evans, G. 2012. “The Value of Friendship: Subject/Object Transformations in the Economy of Becoming a Person (Bermondsey, Southeast London).” In The Ways of Friendship: Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Desai, A. and Killick, E., 174196. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Eyre, S. L., Hoffman, V., and Millstein, S. G.. 1998. “The Gamesmanship of Sex: A Model Based on African American Adolescent Accounts.” Medical Anthropological Quarterly, 12(4): 467487.Google Scholar
Fabrega, H., Jr. and Miller, B. D.. 1995. “Toward a More Comprehensive Medical Anthropology: The Case of Adolescent Psychopathology.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 9(4): 431461.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fein, E. 2020. Living on the Spectrum: Autism and Youth in Community. New York: New York University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froerer, P. 2012. “Close Friends: The Importance of Proximity in the Formation in Children’s Peer Relations in Chhattisgarh, India.” In The Ways of Friendship: Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Desai, A. and Killick, E., 133153. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Garrett, P. B. and Baquedano-López, P.. 2002. “Language Socialization: Reproduction and Continuity, Transformation and Change.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 31: 339361.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geertman, S. and Boudreau, J.. 2018. “‘Life as Art’: Emerging Youth Networks in Hanoi and the Tree Hug Movement.” City & Society, 30(2): 210236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginsburg, F. and Rapp, R.. 1991. “The Politics of Reproduction.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 20: 3143.Google ScholarPubMed
Goelman, H. 2002. “Toward a Historical and Spiritual Understanding of Child Development: The Medieval Commentaries of Rabbi Moshe Yehuda ibn Mahiri.” Ethos, 29(4): 491512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Groark, K. P. 2019. “Freud among the Boasians: Psychoanalytic Influence and Ambivalence in American Anthropology.” Current Anthropology, 60(4): 559588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutmann, M. C. 1997. “Trafficking in Men: The Anthropology of Masculinity.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 26: 385409.Google Scholar
Hall, G. S. 1904. Adolescence: Its Psychology and its Relation to Physiology, Anthropology, Sociology, Sex, Crime, Religion, and Education, vols. 1–2. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Handwerker, W. P. 2003. “Traumatic Stress, Ecological Contingency, and Sexual Behavior: Antecedents and Effects of Sexual Precociousness, Sexual Mobility, and Adolescent Child bearing in Antigua.” Ethos, 31(3): 385411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hecht, T. 1998. At Home in the Street: Street Children in Northeast Brazil. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hejtmanek, K. 2010. “Caring Through Restraint: Violence, Intimacy, and Identity in Mental Health Practice.” Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 34: 668674.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hejtmanek, K. 2015. Friendship, Love, and Hip Hop: An Ethnography of African American Men in Psychiatric Custody. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hejtmanek, K. 2016. “Care, Closeness, and Becoming ‘Better’: Transformation and Therapeutic Process in American Adolescent Psychiatric Custody.” Ethos, 44(3): 313332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollos, M. and Leis, P. E.. 1986. “Descent and Permissive Adolescent Sexuality in Two Ijo Communities.” Ethos, 14(4): 395408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollos, M. and Leis, P. E.. 1989. Becoming Nigerian in Ijo Society. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Hollos, M. and Richards, F.. 1993. “Gender-Associated Development of Formal Operations in Nigerian Adolescents.” Ethos, 21(1): 2452.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hruschka, D. 2009. “Defining Cultural Competence in Context: Dyadic Norms of Friendship Among US High School Students.” Ethos, 37(2): 205224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hruschka, D. 2010. Friendship: Development, Ecology, and Evolution of a Relationship. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huberman, J. 2012. Ambivalent Encounters: Childhood, Tourism, and Social Change in Banaras, India. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
HRAF. 2021. Human Relations Area Files: Cultural Information for Research and Education. https://hraf.yale.edu/about/.Google Scholar
Hurston, Z. N. 1937. Their Eyes Were Watching God. Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott.Google Scholar
Jarrett, R. L. 1997. “Resilience among Low-Income African American Youth: An Ethnographic Perspective.” Ethos, 25(2): 218229.Google Scholar
Jeffrey, C. 2010. “Timepass: Youth, Class, and Time Among Unemployed Young Indian Men.American Ethnologist, 37(3): 465481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jenkins, J. H. 2015. “Straining Psychic and Social Sinew: Trauma among Adolescent Psychiatric Patients in New Mexico.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 29(1): 4260.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jenkins, J. H. and Csordas, T. J.. 2020. Troubled in the Land of Enchantment: Adolescent Experience of Psychiatric Treatment. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kernan, C. L. and Greenfield, P. M.. 2005. “Becoming a Team: Individualism, Collectivism, Ethnicity, and Group Socialization in Los Angeles Girls’ Basketball.” Ethos, 33(4): 542566.Google Scholar
Kenny, R. 2015. “Freud, Jung and Boas: The Psychoanalytic Engagement with Anthropology Revisited.” Notes and Records, 69: 173190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Killick, E. and Desai, A.. 2012. “Valuing Friendship.” In The Ways of Friendship: Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Desai, A. and Killick, E., 119. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Killick, E. 2012. “Ayompari, Compadre, Amigo: Forms of Fellowship in Peruvian Amazonia.” In The Ways of Friendship: Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Desai, A. and Killick, E., 4668. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Korbin, J. E. 2003. “Children, Childhoods, and Violence.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 32: 431–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korbin, J. E. and Anderson-Fye, E. P.. 2011. “Adolescence Matters: Practice-and-Policy-Relevant Research and Engagement in Psychological Anthropology.” Ethos, 39(4): 415425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroeber, A. L. 1920. “Totem and Taboo: An Ethnologic Psychoanalysis.” American Anthropologist, 22(1): 4855Google Scholar
Kyratzis, A. 2004. “Talk and Interaction Among Children and the Co-Construction of Peer Groups and Peer Culture.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 33: 625649.Google Scholar
Lave, J., Duguid, P., Fernandez, N., and Axel, E.. 1992. “Coming of Age in Birmingham: Cultural Studies and Conceptions of Subjectivity.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 21: 257282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebra, T. S. 1995. “Skipped and Postponed Adolescence of Aristocratic Women in Japan: Resurrecting the Culture/Nature Issue.” Ethos, 23(1): 79102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leis, P. and Hollos, M.. 1989 Becoming Nigerian in Ijo Society. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Lende, D. H. 2005. “Wanting and Drug Use: A Biocultural Approach to the Analysis of Addiction.” Ethos, 33(1): 100124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lende, D. H. and Downey, G., eds. 2015. The Encultured Brain: An Introduction to Neuroanthropology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Lester, R. J. 2021. “SPA2021: Welcome Address” [Online video clip]. Society for Psychological Anthropology biennial meetings, April 9, 2021. www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIZeL3inkSI&t=4s.Google Scholar
Lester, R. J. 2011. “How Do I Code for Black Fingernail Polish? Finding the Missing Adolescent in Managed Mental Health Care.” Ethos, 39(4): 481496.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2001. “Culture and Personality Studies, 1918–1960: Myth and History.” Journal of Personality, 69(6): 803818.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
LeVine, R. A. 2007. “Ethnographic Studies of Childhood: A Historical Overview.” American Anthropologist, 109(2): 247260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2011. “Traditions in Transitions: Adolescents Remaking Culture.” Ethos, 39(4): 426431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and LeVine, S. E.. 2002. “The Schooling of Women: Maternal Behavior and Child Environments.” Ethos, 29(3): 259270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A., LeVine, S. E., and Schnell, B. B.. 2001 “‘Improve the Women’: Mass Schooling, Female Literacy, and Worldwide Social Change.” Harvard Educational Review, 71(1): 150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A., Dixon, S., LeVine, S., Richman, A., Leiderman, P. H., Keefer, C. H., and Brazelton, T. B.. 1994. Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lietchy, M. 1995. “Media, Markets and Modernization: Youth Identities and the Experience of Modernity in Kathmandu, Nepal.” In Youth Cultures, edited by Amit-Talai, V. and Wulff, H., 199201. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Loh, C. E. 2013. “Singaporean Boys Constructing Global Literate Selves through Their Reading Practices in and out of School.” Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 44(1): 3857.Google Scholar
Lomniczi, A., Wright, H., and Ojeda, S. R.. 2015. “Epigenetic Regulation of Female Puberty.” Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology, 36: 90107.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lowe, E. D. 2003. “Identity, Activity, and the Well-Being of Adolescents and Youth: Lessons from Young People in a Micronesian Society.” Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 27: 187219.Google Scholar
Lowe, E. D. 2019. “Epidemic Suicide in the Context of Modernizing Social Change in Oceania: A Critical Review and Assessment.” The Contemporary Pacific, 31(1): 105138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lystad, M. H. 1970. “Adolescent Social Attitudes in South Africa and Swaziland.” American Anthropologist, 72(6): 13891397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marzullo, M. A. and Herdt, G.. 2011. “Marriage Rights and LGBTQ Youth: The Present and Future Impact of Sexuality Policy Changes.” Ethos, 39(4): 526552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClure, S. 2020. “Living Unembodiment: Physicality and Body/Self Discontinuity Among African American Adolescent Girls.” Ethos, 48(1): 328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mead, M. 1928. Coming of Age in Samoa. New York: William Morrow.Google Scholar
Mendoza-Denton, N. and Boum, A.. 2015. “Breached Initiations: Sociopolitical Resources and Conflicts in Emergent Adulthood.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 44: 295310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miles, A. 2000. “Poor Adolescent Girls and Social Transformations in Cuenca, Ecuador.” Ethos, 28(1): 5474.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, E. V. 2016. “Postures of Empowerment: Cultivating Aspirant Feminism in a Ugandan NGO.” Ethos, 44(3): 375396.Google Scholar
Ogbu, J. U. 1982. “Cultural Discontinuities and Schooling.” Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 13(4): 290307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ogbu, J. U. and Simons, H. D. 1998. “Voluntary and Involuntary Minorities: A Cultural-Ecological Theory of School Performance with Some Implications for Education.” Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 29(2): 155188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Panter-Brick, C. 2002. “Street Children, Human Rights, and Public Health: A Critique and Future Directions.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 31: 147171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pardue, D. 2011. Brazilian Hip Hoppers Speak from the Margins: We’s on Tape. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Pardue, D. 2013. “Who are We?: Hip Hoppers’ Influence in the Brazilian Understanding of Citizenship and Education.” In Schooling Hip-Hop: Expanding Hip-Hop Based Education Across the Curriculum, edited by Hilland, M. and Petchauer, E., 137154. New York: Teachers College Press.Google Scholar
Quinn, N. 1977. “Anthropological Studies of Women’s Status.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 6: 181225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robben, A. C. G. M. 2000. “The Assault on Basic Trust: Disappearance, Protest and Reburial in Argentina.” In Cultures under Siege: Collective Violence and Trauma, edited by Robben, A. C. G. M. and Suárez-Orozco, M., 71106. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rosen, D. M. 2007. “Child Soldiers, International Humanitarian Law, and the Globalization of Childhood.” American Anthropologist, 109(2): 296306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheld, S. 2008. “Youth Cosmopolitanism: Clothing, the City, and Globalization in Dakar, Senegal.” City & Society, 19(2): 232253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. and Sargent, C., eds. 1999. Small Wars: The Cultural Politics of Childhood. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schieffelin, B. B. and Ochs, E.. 1986. “Language Socialization.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 15: 163191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlegel, A. 1973. “The Adolescent Socialization of the Hopi Girl.” Ethnology, 12: 449462.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. 1977. “Issues in the Study of Adolescence and Youth.” Youth and Society, 8: 417428.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. 1995a. “Introduction.” Ethos, 23(1): 314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlegel, A. 1995b. “A Cross-Cultural Approach to Adolescence.” Ethos, 23(1): 1532.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlegel, A. 2000. “The Global Spread of Adolescent Culture.” In Negotiating Adolescence in Times of Social Change: Cross-National Perspectives on Developmental Process and Social Intervention, edited by Silbereisen, R. and Crockett, L., 7188. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. and Berry, H. III. 1979. “Adolescent Initiation Ceremonies: A Cross-Cultural Code.” Ethnology, 18: 199210.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. and Berry, H. III. 1989. “Adolescents at Play: A Cross-Cultural Study of Adolescent Games.” In The Content of Culture: Constants and Variants, edited by Bolton, R., 3348. New Haven, CT: Human Relations Area Files Press.Google Scholar
Schlegel, A. and Berry, H. III. 1991. Adolescence: An Anthropological Inquiry. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Schwartzman, H. B. 1976. “The Anthropological Study of Children’s Play.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 5: 289328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shankar, S. 2018. “Youth Culture.” Oxford Bibliographies [Online annotated bibliographies]. https://tinyurl.com/yvkp5nne.Google Scholar
Shoshana, A. 2013. “Role-Play and ‘As If’ Self in Everyday Life.” Ethos, 41(2): 150173.Google Scholar
Sieber, T., Cordeiro, G. Í., and Ferro, L.. 2012. “The Neighborhood Strikes Back: Community Murals by Youth in Boston.” City & Society, 24(3): 263280.Google Scholar
Silver, L. J. 2010. “Spaces of Encounter: Public Bureaucracy and the Making of Client Identities.” Ethos 38 (3): 275296.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silver, L. J. 2015. System Kids: Adolescent Mothers and the Politics of Regulation. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silverman, E. K. 2004. “Anthropology and Circumcision.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 33: 419445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith-Hefner, N. J. 2008. “Youth Language, Gaul Sociability, and the New Indonesian Middle Class.Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 17(2): 184203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spindler, G., ed. 1955. Education and Anthropology. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Stambach, A. 2010. “Education, Religion, and Anthropology in Africa.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 39: 361379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suárez-Orozco, M. M., Darbes, T., Dias, S. I., and Sutin, M.. 2011. “Migrations and Schooling.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 40: 311328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suárez-Orozco, M. M. and Suárez-Orozco, C.. 1995. Transformations: Immigration, Family Life, and Achievement Motivation Among Latino Adolescents. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Susser, I. 1996. “The Construction of Poverty and Homelessness in US Cities.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 25: 411435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suzuki, L. K., Davis, H. M., and Greenfield, P. M.. 2008. “Self-Enhancement and Self-Effacement in Reaction to Praise and Criticism: The Case of Multiethnic Youth.” Ethos, 36(1): 7897.Google Scholar
Topper, M. D. 1979. “‘Mormon Placement’: The Effects of Missionary Foster Families on Navajo Adolescents.” Ethos, 7(2): 142160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tranberg-Hansen, K. 2004. “The World in Dress: Anthropological Perspectives on Clothing, Fashion, and Culture.Annual Review of Anthropology, 33: 369392.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Traube, E. G. 1996. “‘The Popular’ in American Culture.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 25: 127151.Google Scholar
Vestel, V. 2009. “Limits of Hybridity Versus Limits of Tradition?: A Semiotics of Cultural Reproduction, Creativity, and Ambivalence among Multicultural Youth in Rudenga, East Side Oslo.” Ethos, 37(4): 466488.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vigil, J. D. 1988. “Group Processes and Street Identity: Adolescent Chicano Gang Members.” Ethos, 16(4): 421445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S., Bradley, C., and Kilbride, P. L., eds. 1997. African Families and the Crisis of Social Change. Westport, CT.: Bergin & Garvey.Google Scholar
Weszkalnys, G. 2008. “A Robust Square: Planning, Youth Work, and the Making of Public Space in Post-Unification Berlin.” City & Society, 20(2): 251274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiting, J. W. M., Burbank, V., and Ratner, M.. 1986. “The Duration of Maidenhood Across Cultures.” In Culture and Human Development: The Selected Papers of John Whiting, edited by Chasdi, E. H., 282305. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Whiting, J. W. M. and Child, I.. 1953. Child Training and Personality: A Cross-Cultural Study. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiting, J. W. M., Kluckhohn, R., and Anthony, A.. 1958. “The Function of Male Initiation Ceremonies at Puberty.” In Readings in Social Psychology, 3rd ed., edited by Maccoby, E. E., Newcomb, T. M., and Hartley, E. L., 359370. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.Google Scholar
Whiting, B.B. and Whiting, J. W. M.. 1975. The Children of Six Cultures: A Psycho-Cultural Analysis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Williams, J. P. 2007. “Youth-Subcultural Studies: Sociological Traditions and Core Concepts.” Sociology Compass, 1(2): 572593.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willis, P. 1980. Learning to Labor: How Working Class Kids Get Working Class Jobs. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Worthman, C. M. 1987. “Interactions of Physical Maturation and Cultural Practice in Ontogeny: Kikuyu Adolescents.” Cultural Anthropology, 2: 2938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worthman, C. M. 2011. “Inside-Out and Outside-In? Global Development Theory, Policy, and Youth.” Ethos, 39(4): 432451.Google Scholar
Worthman, C. M. and Trang, K.. 2018. “Dynamics of Body Time, Social Time and Life History at Adolescence.” Nature, 554: 451457.Google ScholarPubMed
Worthman, C. M. and Whiting, J. W. M.. 1987. “Social Change in Adolescent Sexual Behavior, Mate Selection, and Premarital Pregnancy Rates in a Kikuyu Community.” Ethos, 15(2): 145165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yon, D. A. 2003. “Highlights and Overview of the History of Educational Ethnography.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 32: 411429.Google Scholar

References

Apicella, C., Norenzayan, A., and Henrich, J.. 2020. “Beyond WEIRD: A Review of the Last Decade and a Look ahead to the Global Laboratory of the Future.” Evolution and Human Behavior, 41(5): 319329.Google Scholar
Arnett, J. J. 2011. “Emerging Adulthood(S). The Cultural Psychology of a New Life Stage.” In Bridging Cultural and Developmental Approaches to Psychology. New Syntheses in Theory, Research and Policy, edited by Jensen, L. A., 255274. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Baldassar, L. 2007. “Transnational Families and the Provision of Moral and Emotional Support: The Relationship between Truth and Distance.Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, 14(4): 385409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bateson, G. and Mead, M.. 1942. Balinese Character: A Photographic Analysis, vol. 2, Special Publications of the New York Academy of Sciences. New York: New York Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Berman, E. 2018. “Force Signs: Ideologies of Corporal Discipline in Academia and the Marshall Islands. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 28(1): 2242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, J. W. 1992. “Acculturation and Adaptation in a New Society.International Migration, 30: 69–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betancourt, T. S., Abdi, S., Ito, B. S., Lilienthal, G. M., Agalab, N., and Ellis, H.. 2015. “We Left One War and Came to Another: Resource Loss, Acculturative Stress, and Caregiver–Child Relationships in Somali Refugee Families.Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 21(1): 114125.Google ScholarPubMed
Bhatia, S. and Ram, A.. 2001. “Rethinking ‘Acculturation’ in Relation to Diasporic Cultures and Postcolonial Identities.Human Development, 44(1): 118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bird-David, N. 2015. “Modern Biases, Hunter‑Gatherers’ Children: On the Visibility of Children in Other Cultures.” In The Archaeology of Childhood. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on an Archaeological Enigma, edited by Coskunsu, G., 91103. New York: SUNY Press.Google Scholar
Bledsoe, C. and Isiugo-Abanihe, U.. 1989. “Strategies of Child-Fosterage among Mende Grannies in Sierra Leone.” In Reproduction and Social Organization in Sub-Saharan Africa, edited by Lesthaeghe, R. J., 442474. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluebond‐Langner, M. and Korbin, J. E.. 2007. “Challenges and Opportunities in the Anthropology of Childhoods: An Introduction to ‘Children, Childhoods, and Childhood Studies’.” American Anthropologist, 109(2): 241246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, F., ed. 2004. Cross-Cultural Approaches to Adoption. New York: Psychology Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carra, C., Lavelli, M., Keller, H., and Kärtner, J.. 2013. “Parenting Infants: Socialization Goals and Behaviors of Italian Mothers and Immigrant Mothers from West Africa.Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 44(8): 13041320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castañeda, H. 2019. Borders of Belonging: Struggle and Solidarity in Mixed-Status Immigrant Families. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Cheney, K. 2017. Crying for Our Elders: African Orphanhood in the Age of HIV/AIDS. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cissé, A., De Haene, L., Keatley, E., and Rasmussen, A.. 2020. “Pre- and Post-Migration Trauma and Adversity: Sources of Resilience and Family Coping among West African Refugee Families.” In Working with Refugee Families: Trauma and Exile in Family Relationships, edited by De Haene, L. and Rousseau, C., 5068. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Coe, C. 2008. “The Structuring of Feeling in Ghanaian Transnational Families.City and Society, 20(2): 222250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coe, C. 2013. The Scattered Family: Parenting, African Migrants, and Global Inequality. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, M. 1996. Cultural Psychology: A Once and Future Discipline. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Cross-Barnet, C., Cherlin, A., and Burton, L.. 2011. “Bound by Children: Intermittent Cohabitation and Living Together Apart.” Family Relations, 60(5): 633647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalgaard, N. T., Thøgersen, M. H., and Riber, K.. 2020. “Transgenerational Trauma Transmission in Refugee Families: The Role of Traumatic Suffering, Attachment Representations, and Parental Caregiving.” In Working with Refugee Families: Trauma and Exile in Family Relationships, edited by De Haene, L. and Rousseau, C., 3649. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
de Guzman, M. R. T., Brown, J., and Edwards, C. P., eds. 2018. Parenting from Afar and the Reconfiguration of Family across Distance. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Haan, M. 2011. “The Reconstruction of Parenting after Migration: A Perspective from Cultural Translation.Human Development, 54(6): 376399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Haan, M., Koeman, M., and de Winter, M.. 2020. “Reshaping Parental Ethnotheories of Dutch-Moroccan Immigrant Parents in the Netherlands: Networking in Multiple Worlds.” New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 170: 171193.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Haene, L. and Rousseau, C.. 2020. “Working with Refugee Families: Inscribing Suffering and Restoration in Personal and Communal Worlds.” In Working with Refugee Families: Trauma and Exile in Family Relationships, edited by De Haene, L. and Rousseau, C., 117. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Duncan, W. L. 2015. “Transnational Disorders: Returned Migrants at Oaxaca’s Psychiatric Hospital.Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 29(1): 2441.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Edgerton, R. B. 1976. Deviance: A Cross-Cultural Perspective. Menlo Park, CA: Cummings.Google Scholar
Edgerton, R. B. 1985. Rules, Exceptions, and Social Order. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edgerton, R. B. 1992. Sick Societies. Challenging the Myth of Primitive Harmony. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Edwards, C. P. 2000. “Children’s Play in Cross-Cultural Perspective: A New Look at the Six Cultures Study.” Cross-Cultural Research, 34: 318338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, C. P. and Bloch, M.. 2010. “The Whitings’ Concepts of Culture and How They Have Fared in Contemporary Psychology and Anthropology.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 41(4): 485498.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fein, E. and Rios, C., eds. 2018. Autism in Translation. An Intercultural Conversation on Autism Spectrum Conditions. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodnow, J. J., Miller, P. J., and Kessel, F., eds. 1995. Cultural Practices as Contexts for Development: New Directions for Child Development. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Gottlieb, A. 2004. The Afterlife is Where We Come From: The Culture of Infancy in West Africa. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Graburn, N. H. 1987. “Severe Child Abuse among the Canadian Inuit.” In Child Survival: Anthropological Perspectives on the Treatment and Maltreatment of Children, edited by Scheper-Hughes, N., 211225. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guarnaccia, P. J. and Hausmann-Stabile, C.. 2016. “Acculturation and Its Discontents: A Case for Bringing Anthropology Back into the Conversation.Sociology and Anthropology (Alhambra, Calif.), 4(2): 114124.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Haas, B. M. 2023. Suspended Lives: Navigating Everyday Violence in the US Asylum System. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C. M., eds. 1996. Parents’ Cultural Belief Systems. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Harkness, S. and Super, C.. 1996. Introduction. In Parents’ Cultural Belief Systems, edited by Harkness, S. and Super, C. M., 123. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Harkness, S., Żylicz, P., Super, C., Welles-Nyström, B., Bermúdez, M. R., Bonichini, S., Moscardino, U., and Mavridis, C.. 2011. “Children’s Activities and Their Meanings for Parents: A Mixed-Methods Study in Six Western Cultures.” Journal of Family Psychology, 25(6): 799813.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heidbrink, L. 2020. Migranthood: Youth in a New Era of Deportation. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Henrich, J. 2020. The WEIRDest People in the World. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.Google Scholar
Henrich, J., Heine, S. J., and Norenzayan, A.. 2010. “The Weirdest People in the World?Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33(2–3): 6183.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hewlett, B. S., ed. 1992. Father-Child Relations: Cultural and Biosocial Contexts. New York: Aldine de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Hewlett, B. S. 2000. “Culture, History and Sex: Anthropological Contributions to Conceptualizing Father Involvement.” Marriage & Family Review, 29(2–3): 5973.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hewlett, B. S. and Lamb, M. E.. 2005. Hunter-Gatherer Childhoods: Evolutionary, Developmental, and Cultural Perspectives. Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Hondagneu-Sotelo, P. and Avila, E.. 1997. “‘I’m Here, but I’m There’ The Meanings of Latina Transnational Motherhood.Gender and Society, 11(5): 548571.Google Scholar
Horton, S. 2009. “A Mother’s Heart is Weighed Down with Stones: A Phenomenological Approach to the Experience of Transnational Motherhood.Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 33(1): 2140.Google Scholar
Hrdy, S. B. 2009. Mothers and Others: The Evolutionary Origins of Mutual Understanding. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
International Organization for Migration. 2020. World Migration Report. Geneva: IMO. https://publications.iom.int/system/files/pdf/wmr_2020.pdf.Google Scholar
Kempe, C. H., Silverman, F. N., Steele, B. F., Droegemueller, W., and Silver, H. K.. 1962. “The Battered-Child Syndrome.” Journal of the American Medical Association, 181(1): 1724.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kimbrough-Melton, R. 2021. “Child Maltreatment as a Problem in International Law.” In Handbook of Child Maltreatment, edited by Krugman, R. and Korbin, J., 541551. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Konner, M. 2010. The Evolution of Childhood: Relationships, Emotion and Mind. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Korbin, J., ed. 1981. Child Abuse and Neglect: Cross-Cultural Perspectives. Berkeley: University of California Press. Reprinted in 2018 as part of University of California Press’s Voices Revived program.Google Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2014. The Anthropology of Childhood: Cherubs, Chattel, Changelings. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F. 2017. Raising Children: Surprising Insights from Other Cultures. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancy, D. F., Bock, J., and Gaskins, S., eds. 2010. The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.Google Scholar
Leinaweaver, J. 2014. “Informal Kinship‐Based Fostering around the World: Anthropological Findings.” Child Development Perspectives, 8(3): 131136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lemelson, R. and Tucker, A.. 2021. Widening the Frame with Visual Psychological Anthropology: Perspectives on Trauma, Gendered Violence, and Stigma in Indonesia. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. 1977. “Child Rearing as Cultural Adaptation.” In Culture and Infancy: Variations in the Human Experience, edited by Leiderman, P., Tulkin, S., and Rosenfeld, A.. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 1988. “Human Parental Care: Universal Goals, Cultural Strategies, Individual Behavior.” In Parental Behavior in Diverse Societies, edited by LeVine, R. A., Miller, P. M., and West, M. M., 312. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 2007. “Ethnographic Studies of Childhood: A Historical Overview.” American Anthropologist, 109: 247260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A., Dixon, S., Levine, S., Richman, A., Leiderman, P. H., Keefer, C., and Brazelton, T. B.. 1994. Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and LeVine, S.. 2016. Do Parents Matter? Why Japanese Babies Sleep Well, Mexican Siblings Don’t Fight, And American Parents Should Just Relax. New York: Public Affairs Press.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A., LeVine, S., Schnell-Anzola, B., Rowe, M. L., and Dexter, E., eds. 2012. Literacy and Mothering: How Women’s Schooling Changes the Lives of the World’s Children. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A., Miller, P. M., and West, M. M., eds. 1988. Parental Behavior in Diverse Societies. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. and New, R. S., eds. 2008. Anthropology and Child Development. A Cross-Cultural Reader. Malden, MA: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Lopez, W. D. 2019. Separated: Family and Community in the Aftermath of an Immigration Raid. Baltimore, MD: JHU Press.Google Scholar
Maynard, A. E. and Martini, M. I., eds. 2005. Learning in Cultural Contexts. Families, Peers, and Schools. New York: Kluwer Academic.Google Scholar
Miller, B. D. 1981. The Endangered Sex: Neglect of Female Children in Rural North India. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Otto, H. and Keller, H.. 2015. “A Good Child is a Calm Child: Mothers’ Social Status, Maternal Conceptions of Proper Demeanor, and Stranger Anxiety in One-Year Old Cameroonian Nso Children.Psychological Topics, 24(1): 125.Google Scholar
Parreñas, R. S. 2001. “Mothering from a Distance: Emotions, Gender, and Intergenerational Relations in Filipino Transnational Families.Feminist Studies, 27(2): 361390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poffenberger, T. 1981. “Child Rearing and Social Structure in Rural India. Toward a Cross-Cultural Definition of Child Abuse and Neglect.” In Child Abuse and Neglect: Cross Cultural Perspectives, edited by Korbin, J., 7195. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Quinn, N. 2005. “Universals of Child Rearing.” Anthropological Theory 5(4): 475514.Google Scholar
Raghavan, C. S., Harkness, S., and Super, C. M.. 2010. “Parental Ethnotheories in the Context of Immigration: Asian Indian Immigrant and Euro-American Mothers and Daughters in an American Town.Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 41(4): 617632.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B. 2014. “Learning By Observing and Pitching in to Family and Community Endeavors: An Orientation.” Human Development, 57(2–3): 6981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B., Mistry, J., Göncü, A., and Mosieret, C.. 1993. “Guided Participation in Cultural Activity by Toddlers and Caregivers.” Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 58(8): i179.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sargent, C. 1988. “Born to Die: Witchcraft and Infanticide in Bariba Culture.” Ethnology, 27(1): 7995.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sargent, C. 1989. Maternity, Medicine and Power: Reproductive Decisions in Urban Benin. Berkeley: University of California Press. Reprinted in 2021 as part of University of California Press’s Voices Revived program.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scelza, B. A. and Silk, J. B.. 2014. “Fosterage as a System of Dispersed Cooperative Breeding: Evidence from the Himba.” Human Nature, 25: 448464.Google ScholarPubMed
Scheper-Hughes, N. 1985. “Culture, Scarcity and Maternal Thinking: Maternal Detachment and Infant Survival in a Brazilian Shantytown.” Ethos, 13(4): 291317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N., ed. 1987. Child Survival: Anthropological Perspectives on the Treatment and Maltreatment of Children. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. 1990. “Mother Love and Child Death in Northeast Brazil.” In Cultural Psychology: Essays on Comparative Human Development, edited by Stigler, J. W., Shweder, R. A., and Herdt, G., 542565. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. and Sargent, C., eds. 1998. Small Wars. The Cultural Politics of Childhood. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. and Montgomery, E.. 2020. “Forced Separation, Ruptured Kinship and Transnational Family.” In Working with Refugee Families: Trauma and Exile in Family Relationships, edited by De Haene, L. and Rousseau, C., 87102. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shi, L. 2017. Choosing Daughters: Family Change in Rural China. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shwalb, D. W., Shwalb, B. J., and Lamb, M. E., eds. 2013. Fathers in a Cultural Context. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Shweder, R. A. 2002. “What About ‘Female Genital Mutilation?”: And Why Culture Matters in the First Place.” In Engaging Cultural Differences: The Multicultural Challenge in Liberal Democracies, edited by Shweder, R. A., Minow, M., and Markus, H., 216251. New York: Russell Sage Foundation Press.Google Scholar
Shweder, R. A. 2013. “Symposium on German Court Ruling on Circumcision. The Goose and the Gander: The Genital Wars.” Global Discourse, 3(2): 348366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spiro, M. E. 1975. Children of the Kibbutz. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Super, C. M. and Harkness, S.. 2002. “Culture Structures the Environment for Development.” Human Development, 45: 270274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suárez-Orozco, C. and Suárez-Orozco, M. M.. 2010. “The Psychosocial Experience of Immigration.” In Psychological Anthropology: A Reader on Self in Culture, edited by LeVine, R. A., 329344. New York: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Tobin, J. 1990. “The HRAF as Radical Text?Cultural Anthropology, 5(4): 473487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vesely, C. K., Letiecq, B. L., and Goodman, R. D.. 2019. “Parenting across Two Worlds: Low-Income Latina Immigrants’ Adaptation to Motherhood in the United States.Journal of Family Issues, 40(6): 711738.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 1987. “Socialization for Parenthood in Sibling Caretaking Societies.” In Parenting Across the Life Span, edited by Lancaster, J., Rossi, A., Altmann, J., and Sherrod, L., 237270. New York: Aldine Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T.S. 1996. “Why Ethnography Should Be the Most Important Method in the Study of Human Development.” In Ethnography and Human Development. Context and Meaning in Social Inquiry, edited by Jessor, R., Colby, A., and Shweder, R., 305324. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2002. “Ecocultural Understanding of Children’s Developmental Pathways.” Human Development, 45(4): 275281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2009a. “African Societies and Cultures, Childhood and Adolescence.” In The Child: An Encyclopedic Companion, edited by Shweder, R. A., Bidell, T. R., Dailey, A. C., Dixon, S. D., Miller, P. J., and Modell, J., 4346. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2009b. “Parenting.” In The Child: An Encyclopedic Companion, edited by Shweder, R. A., Bidell, T. R., Dailey, A. C., Dixon, S. D., Miller, P. J., and Modell, J., 706709. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2011a. “Socialization for Parenthood in Sibling Caretaking Societies.” In Parenting Across the Life Span, edited by Lancaster, J., Altmann, J., Rossi, A., and Sherrod, L., 237270. Piscataway, NJ: Aldine Transaction.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2011b. “If You Work in This Country You Should Not Be Poor, and Your Kids Should Be Doing Better: Bringing Mixed Methods and Theory in Psychological Anthropology to Improve Research in Policy and Practice.” Ethos, 39(4): 455476.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2015. “Childhood: Anthropological Aspects.” In International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, 2nd ed., edited by Wright, J. D., 451458. Oxford: Elsevier.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2018. “Forward.” In Parenting from Afar and the Reconfiguration of Family Across Distance, edited by de Guzman, M. R. T., Brown, J., and Edwards, C. P., ixxiii. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. 2018. “Chapter 4: Culture, Context, and the Integration of Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in the Study of Human Development.” In Advances in Culture and Psychology, edited by Gelfand, M., Chiu, C. Y., and Hong, Y. Y, 153216. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. and Edwards, C. P., eds. 2002. “Honoring the Contributions of Beatrice B. Whiting.” Ethos, 29(3): 239389.Google Scholar
Weisner, T. S. and Gallimore, R.. 1977. “My Brother’s Keeper: Child and Sibling Caretaking.” Current Anthropology, 18(2): 169190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whiting, B. and Edwards, C. P.. 1988. Children of Different Worlds: The Formation of Social Behavior. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Whiting, J. and Whiting, B.. 1975. Children of Six Cultures: A Psychocultural Analysis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willen, S. S. 2014. “Plotting a Moral Trajectory, Sans Papiers: Outlaw Motherhood as Inhabitable Space of Welcome.Ethos, 42(1): 84100.Google Scholar
Willen, S. S. 2019. Fighting for Dignity: Migrant Lives at Israel’s Margins. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Worthman, C. M. 2010. “The Ecology of Human Development: Evolving Models for Cultural Psychology.” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 41(4): 546562.Google Scholar
Worthman, C., Tomlinson, M., and Rotheram-Borus, J. J.. 2016. “When Can Parents Most Influence Their Child’s Development? Expert Knowledge and Perceived Local Realities.” Social Science and Medicine, 154: 6269.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yarris, K. E. 2017. Care Across Generations. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

References

Amrith, M., Sakti, V. K., and Sampaio, D., eds. 2023. Aspiring in Later Life: Movements Across Time, Space and Generations. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Aulino, F. 2019. Rituals of Care: Karmic Politics in an Aging Thailand. Ithaca, NY: Program Publications.Google Scholar
Baldassar, A. P. L. 2008. “Missing Kin and Longing to Be Together: Emotions and the Construction of Co-presence in Transnational Relationships.” Journal of Intercultural Studies, 29: 247266. https://doi.org/10.1080/07256860802169196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buch, E. D. 2015. “Anthropology of Aging and Care.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 44: 277–93. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-anthro-102214-014254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buch, E. D. 2018. Inequalities of Aging: Paradoxes of Independence in American Home Care. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar
Carstensen, L. L. 2021. “Socioemotional Selectivity Theory: The Role of Perceived Endings in Human Motivation.” The Gerontologist, 61: 11881196.Google ScholarPubMed
Carstensen, L. L., Isaacowitz, D. M., and Charles, S. T.. 1999. “Taking Time Seriously: A Theory of Socioemotional Selectivity. American Psychologist, 54: 165181. https://doi.org/10.1037/0003-066X.54.3.165.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carstensen, L. L., Shavit, Y. Z., and Barnes, J. T.. 2020. “Age Advantages in Emotional Experience Persist Even Under Threat from the Covid-19 Pandemic.” Psychological Science, 31: 13741385.Google ScholarPubMed
Cunningham, C. E. 1962. “People of the Dry Land: A Study of the Social Organization of an Indonesian People.” Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Oxford, Oxford.Google Scholar
Danely, J. 2019. “The Limits of Dwelling and the Unwitnessed Death.” Cultural Anthropology, 34: 213239. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca34.2.03.Google Scholar
Danely, J. 2014. Aging and Loss: Mourning and Maturity in Contemporary Japan. Global Perspectives on Aging. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Dewing, J. 2002. “From Ritual to Relationship: A Person-Centred Approach to Consent in Qualitative Research with Older People who Have a Dementia.” Dementia, 1: 157171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drotbohm, H. and Alber, E.. 2015. “Introduction.” In Anthropological Perspectives on Care: Work, Kinship, and the Life-Course, edited by Alber, E. and Drotbohm, H., 119. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Featherstone, M. and Hepworth, M.. 2016. “Chapter 4.10: Images of Ageing: Cultural Representations of Later Life.” In The Cambridge Handbook of Age and Ageing, edited by Johnson, M., Bengtson, V. L., Coleman, P. G., and Kirkwood, T. B., 354362. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Havighurst, R. J. 1961. “Successful Aging.The Gerontologist, 1: 813. https://doi.org/10.1093/geront/1.1.8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochschild, A. R. 1979. “Emotion Work, Feeling Rules, and Social Structure.” The American Journal of Sociology, 85: 551575.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, L. 2023. “Aspirational Movements: Later-Life Mobility as a Female Resource to Age Well.” In Aspiring in Later Life: Movements through Time, Space and Generations, edited by Amrith, M., Sakti, V. K., and Sampaio, D., 5676. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, M. L. 2016. “General Editor’s Preface: The Cambridge Handbook of Age and Ageing.” In The Cambridge Handbook of Age and Ageing, edited by Johnson, M., Bengtson, V. L., Coleman, P. G., and Kirkwood, T. B., xxixxvi. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kavedžija, I. 2019. Making Meaningful Lives: Tales from an Aging Japan, Contemporary Ethnography. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Kleinman, A. 2019. The Soul of Care: The Moral Education of a Husband and a Doctor. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Lamb, S. 2014. “Permanent Personhood or Meaningful Decline? Toward a Critical Anthropology of Successful Aging.” Journal of Aging Studies, 29: 4152.Google ScholarPubMed
Lamb, S., ed. 2017. Successful Aging as a Contemporary Obsession: Global Perspectives. Global Perspectives on Aging. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
Lock, M. 1993. Encounters with Aging: Mythologies of Menopause in Japan and North America. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
López-Otín, C., Blasco, M. A., Partridge, L., Serrano, M., and Kroemer, G.. 2013. “The Hallmarks of Aging.” Cell, 153: 11941217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.05.039.Google ScholarPubMed
Murray, M., Holland, C., and Peel, E.. 2018. “The Psychologies of Ageing.” In Psychologies of Ageing: Theory, Research and Practice, edited by Peel, E., Holland, C., and Murray, M., 117. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Rowe, J. W. and Kahn, R. L.. 1987. “Human Aging: Usual and Successful.” Science, 237: 143149. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3299702.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sakti, V. K. 2022. “‘Here for Now’: Temporalities of Ageing and Forced Displacement through Pension Narratives.” Journal of Intercultural Studies, 43(4): 497513. https://doi.org/10.1080/07256868.2022.2086227.Google Scholar
Sakti, V. K. 2020. “Aging in Timorese Exile: (Im)Mobilities of Care and Intergenerational Relationships.” Journal of Intergenerational Relationships, 18: 301319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sakti, V. K. and Taek, D. Y.. 2023. “Reflections on Ethics in Research with Older Displaced Persons in West Timor: Considering the ‘Time Effect.’” International Quarterly for Asian Studies, 54: 3958. https://doi.org/10.11588/iqas.2023.1.14992.Google Scholar
Schulte Nordholt, H. G. 1971. The Political System of the Atoni of Timor. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Skrbiš, Z. 2008. “Transnational Families: Theorising Migration, Emotions and Belonging.” Journal of Intercultural Studies, 29: 231246. https://doi.org/10.1080/07256860802169188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stodulka, T., Dinkelaker, S., and Thajib, F., eds. 2019. Affective Dimensions of Fieldwork and Ethnography, Theory and History in the Human and Social Sciences. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Svašek, M. 2005. “The Politics of Chosen Trauma, Expellee Memories, Emotions and Identities.” In Mixed Emotions: Anthropological Studies of Feeling, edited by Milton, K. and Svašek, M., 195214. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Svašek, M. 2002. “Narratives of ‘Home’ and ‘Homeland’: The Symbolic Construction and Appropriation of the Sudeten German Heimat.” Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, 9: 495518.Google Scholar
Thelen, T. 2021. “Care as Belonging, Difference, and Inequality.” Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Anthropology: 117. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190854584.013.353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thelen, T. and Coe, C.. 2019. “Political Belonging through Elderly Care: Temporalities, Representations and Mutuality.” Anthropological Theory, 19: 279299. https://doi.org/10.1177/1463499617742833.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
UNDESA. 2015. World Population Ageing 2015. New York: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000151806.Google Scholar

References

Arkin, K. 2020. “What Can Words Do? Debating a ‘Good’ Death in French Palliative Care.” Anthropology Quarterly, 93(2): 177204.Google Scholar
Aulino, F. 2019. Rituals of Care: Karmic Politics in an Aging Thailand. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Banerjee, D. 2020. Enduring Cancer: Life, Death, and Diagnosis in Delhi. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Biehl, J. 2005. Vita: Life in a Zone of Social Abandonment. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Birchok, D. A. 2019. “Teungku Sum’s Dilemma: Ethical Time, Reflexivity, and the Islamic Everyday.” Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 9(2): 269283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bird-David, N. and Israeli, T.. 2010. “A Moment Dead, a Moment Alive: How a Situational Personhood Emerges in the Vegetative State in an Israeli Hospital Unit.” American Anthropologist, 112(1): 5465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buch Segal, L. 2016. No Place for Grief: Martyrs, Prisoners, and Mourning in Contemporary Palestine. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Buchbinder, M. 2021. Scripting Death: Stories of Assisted Dying in America. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Chatterji, R. 2015. “The Experience of Death in a Dutch Nursing Home: On Touching the Other.” In Living and Dying in the Contemporary World: A Compendium, edited by Das, V. and Han, C., 696711. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Chiovenda, A. 2019. “From Metaphor to Interpretation: ‘Haunting’ as Diagnostic of Dissociative Processes.” Ethos, 47(4): 489500.Google Scholar
Chua, J. L. 2014. In Pursuit of the Good Life: Aspiration and Suicide in Globalizing South India. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Danely, J. 2018. “Mourning as Mutuality.” In A Companion to the Anthropology of Death, edited by Robben, A. C. G., 131143. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Das, V. 2007. Life and Words: Violence and the Descent into the Ordinary. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Das, V. 2015. Affliction: Health, Disease, Poverty. New York: Fordham University Press.Google Scholar
DelVecchio Good, M. J., Gadmer, N. M., Ruopp, P., Lakoma, M., Sullivan, A. M., Redinbaugh, E., Arnold, R. M., and Block, S. D.. 2004. “Narrative Nuances on Good and Bad Deaths: Internists’ Tales from High-Technology Work Places.” Social Science and Medicine, 58: 939953.Google ScholarPubMed
DelVecchio Good, M., Hyde, S. T., Pinto, S., and Good, B. J.. 2008. Postcolonial Disorders. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Desjarlais, R. 2016. Subject to Death: Life and Loss in a Buddhist World. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Engelke, M. 2019. “The Anthropology of Death Revisited.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 48: 2944.Google Scholar
Flaherty, D. 2019. “‘Takin’ it One Day at a Time’: (Not) Anticipating as Moral Project.” The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology, 37(1): 6176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flaherty, D. and Throop, C. J.. 2018. “Facing Death: On Mourning, Empathy, and Finitude.” In A Companion to the Anthropology of Death, edited by Robben, A. C. G. M., 161173. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gammeltoft, T. 2014. Haunting Images: A Cultural Account of Reproduction in Vietnam. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garcia, A. 2010. The Pastoral Clinic: Addiction and Dispossession along the Rio Grande. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Good, B. J. 2019. “Hauntology: Theorizing the Spectral in Psychological Anthropology.” Ethos, 47(4): 411–426.Google Scholar
Good, B. J. and DelVecchio Good, M.. 1994. “In the Subjunctive Mode: Epilepsy Narratives in Turkey.” Social Science & Medicine, 38(6): 835842.Google ScholarPubMed
Good, B. J., DelVecchio Good, M., Hyde, S. T., and Pinto, S.. 2008. “Postcolonial Disorders: Reflections on Subjectivity in the Contemporary World.” In Postcolonial Disorders, edited by DelVecchio Good, M., Hyde, S. T., Pinto, S., and Good, B. J., 140. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Hannig, A. 2019. “Author(iz)ing Death: Medical Aid-in-Dying and the Morality of Suicide.” Cultural Anthropology, 34(1): 5377.Google Scholar
Hinton, D. E. and Hinton, A. L., eds. 2014. Genocide and Mass Violence: Memory, Symptom, and Recovery. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollan, D. 1995. “To the Afterworld and Back: Mourning and Dreams of the Dead Among the Toraja.” Ethos, 23(4): 424436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoppe, S. 2020. “The Other within Oneself: Understanding Care for a Family Member with Early-Onset Dementia through the Lens of Dividuality.” Ethos, 48(2): 231249.Google Scholar
Idria, R. 2019. “Letters to Maop: Living with a Ghost as Therapeutic Experience.” Ethos, 47(4): 465479.Google Scholar
Kaufman, S. R. 2000. “In the Shadow of ‘Death with Dignity’: Medicine and Cultural Quandaries of the Vegetative State.” American Anthropologist, 102(1): 6983.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kaufman, S. R. 2005. And a Time to Die: How American Hospitals Shape the End of Life. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaufman, S. R. 2015. Ordinary Medicine: Extraordinary Treatments, Longer Lives, and Where to Draw the Line. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Kloos, D. 2018. Becoming Better Muslims: Religious Authority and Ethical Improvement in Aceh, Indonesia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Lamb, S. 1997. “The Making and Unmaking of Persons: Notes on Aging and Gender in North India.” Ethos, 25(3): 279302.Google Scholar
Lemelson, R. 2014. “‘The Spirits Enter Me to Force Me to be a Communist’: Political Embodiment, Idioms of Distress, Spirit Possession, and Thought Disorder in Bali.” In Genocide and Mass Violence: Memory, Symptom, and Recovery, edited by Hinton, D. E. and Hinton, A. L., 175194. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lemos Dekker, N. 2018. “Moral Frames for Lives Worth Living: Managing the End of Life with Dementia.” Death Studies, 42(5): 322328.Google ScholarPubMed
Lemos Dekker, N. 2019. “Standing at the Doorstep: Affective Encounters in Research on Death and Dying.” In Affective Dimensions of Fieldwork and Ethnography, edited by Stodulka, T., Dinkelaker, S., and Thajib, F., 201211. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Lemos Dekker, N. 2021. “Anticipating an Unwanted Future: Euthanasia and Dementia in the Netherlands.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 27(4): 815831.Google Scholar
LeVine, R. A. 1982. “Gusii Funerals: Meanings of Life and Death in an African Community.” Ethos, 10(1): 2665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lock, M. 2002. Twice Dead: Organ Transplants and the Reinvention of Death. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lowe, E. D. 2022. “Configuring Epidemic Suicide in Oceania.” In Configuring Contagion: Ethnographies of Biosocial Epidemics, edited by Meinert, L. and Seeberg, J., 4467. New York: Berghahn.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maček, I. 2018. “Experience, Empathy, and Flexibility: On Participant Observation in Deadly Fields.” In A Companion to the Anthropology of Death, edited by Robben, A. C. G., 237248. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mattingly, C. 2010. The Paradox of Hope: Journeys through a Clinical Borderland. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Mattingly, C. 2014. Moral Laboratories: Family Peril and the Struggle for a Good Life. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mattingly, C. 2019. “Waiting: Anticipation and Episodic Time.” The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology, 37(1): 1731.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mittermaier, A. 2011. Dreams that Matter: Egyptian Landscapes of the Imagination. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Palgi, P. and Abramovich, H.. 1984. “Death: A Cross-Cultural Perspective.” Annual Review of Anthropology, 13: 385417.Google Scholar
Pinto, S. 2008. Where There Is No Midwife: Birth and Loss in Rural India. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Robben, A. C. G. M. 2005. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Robben, A. C. G. M. 2018. “An Anthropology of Death for the Twenty-First Century.” In A Companion to the Anthropology of Death, edited by Robben, A. C. G., xvxl. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, R. 1993. “Introduction: Grief and a Headhunter’s Rage.” In Culture and Truth: The Remaking of Social Analysis, edited by Rosaldo, R., 121. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Samuels, A. 2018. “‘This Path is Full of Thorns’: Narrative, Subjunctivity, and HIV in Indonesia.” Ethos, 46(1): 95114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuels, A. 2019. After the Tsunami: Disaster Narratives and the Remaking of Everyday Life in Aceh. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.Google Scholar
Samuels, A. 2023. “Silence at the End of Life: Multivocality at the Edges of Narrative Possibility.” American Anthropologist, 125(4): 892895.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shohet, M. 2018. “Two Deaths and a Funeral: Ritual Inscriptions’ Affordances for Mourning and Moral Personhood in Vietnam.” American Ethnologist, 45(1): 6073.Google Scholar
Shohet, M. 2021. Silence and Sacrifice: Family Stories of Care and the Limits of Love in Vietnam. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Shohet, M. 2023. “Silenced Resentments and Regrets: Aging in a Changing Kibbutz.” American Anthropologist, 125(4): 896899.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shohet, M. and Samuels, A.. 2024. “Revisiting and Revisioning Silence and Narrative in Psychological Anthropology.” In Innovations in Psychological Anthropology, edited by Lester, R.. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Stevenson, L. 2014. Life Beside Itself: Imagining Care in the Canadian Arctic. Oakland: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stodulka, T., Selim, N., and Mattes, D.. 2018. “Affective Scholarship: Doing Anthropology with Epistemic Affects.” Ethos, 46(4): 519536.Google Scholar
Stonington, S. 2020. The Spirit Ambulance: Choreographing the End of Life in Thailand. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Tidey, S. 2019. “Keeping the Future at Bay: Waria, Anticipation and Existential Endings in Bali, Indonesia.” The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology, 37(1): 4760.Google Scholar
Throop, C. J. 2010. “Latitudes of Loss: On the Vicissitudes of Empathy.” American Ethnologist, 37(4): 771782.Google Scholar
Varma, S. 2020. The Occupied Clinic: Militarism and Care in Kashmir. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Widger, T. 2015. Suicide in Sri Lanka: The Anthropology of an Epidemic. London: Routledge.Google ScholarPubMed

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×