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The book is a combined effort of scholars who participated in a conference on Post-Soviet Youth: A Comparative Study. The book focuses on the post-perestroika period, a time of great instability and change on the national and individual level. It analyzes the effect of this dynamic on youth, who in the transitional phase of adolescence are particularly susceptible to social disruption.
List of contents
Chapter 1 Youth in Transition: A Comparative Perspective Chapter 2 Youth as a Special Stratum in Post-Communist Society: General Perspectives: Young People in Post-Communist Countries: Vanguard of Change of Lost Generation?; Social Mobility Patterns and Life Strategies of Young People in Contemporary Russia; Youth Chapter 3 The Family as a Socializing Agent in Cross-Cultural Perspective: Culture-Appropriate Parenting and Value Transmission in Families of Israeli-Born Adolescents in Israel; The Influence of Immigration to Israel on the Parental Behavior of Immigrants fr Chapter 4 Attitudes and Aspirations in Cross-Cultural Perspective: The Changes in Aspirations and Life Strategies of Russian and Ukrainian Youth During the Revolutionary Decade: 1985-1995; Ukrainian Youth: The Structure of Values and Social Well-being in a Co Chapter 5 Language and Identity in Youth: The Formation of National Identity and Value Orientations among Jewish Teenagers in Russia; The Motivational-Affective Complex in New Language Acquisition: Russian-Speaking New Immigrant Adolescents Chapter 6 Group Behavior: Post-Soviet Youth in German: Group Formation, Values and Attitudes of a New Immigrant Generation; Street Children in Moscow: Using and Creating Social Capital Chapter 7 Conclusion: From Pacesetters to Dropouts Chapter 8 Contributors Chapter 9 Index
About the author
Tamar Horowitz is former Chairperson of the Department of Education at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. Bella Kotik-Friedgut lectures in Psychology at Achva College of Education. Stefani Hoffman is Director, Mayrock Center for Russian, Eurasian and East European Research, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.