(To see other currencies, click on price)
MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Until recently, boys and men provided the template by which problem behaviors in girls and women were measured. With the shift to studying female development and adjustment through female perspectives comes a need for knowledge of trajectories of at-risk girls’ behavior as they mature. Girls at Risk: Swedish Longitudinal Research on Adjustment fills this gap accessibly and compassionately. Its lifespan approach relates the pathologies of adolescence to later outcomes as girls grow up to have relationships, raise families, and take on adult roles in society.
Coverage is balanced between internalizing behaviors, traditionally considered to be more common among females, and externalizing ones, more common among males. The book's detailed review of findings includes several major longitudinal studies of normative and clinical populations, and the possibility of early maturation as a risk factor for pathology is discussed in depth. Contributors not only emphasize "what works" in intervention and prevention but also identify emerging issues in assessment and treatment. An especially powerful concluding chapter raises serious questions about how individuals in the healing professions perceive their mission, and their clients. Although the studies are from one country—Sweden—the situations, and their potential for successful intervention, transcend national boundaries, including:
• Adolescent and adult implications of pubertal timing.
• Eating disorders and self-esteem.
• Prevention of depressive symptoms.
• Understanding violence in girls with substance problems.
• Lifespan continuity in female aggression and violence.
• A life-course perspective in girls' criminality.
With insights beyond the beaten path, Girls at Risk provides a wealth of information for researchers, clinicians and related professionals, and graduate students in child and school psychology; psychiatry; education; social work; psychotherapy and counseling; and public health.
Feature:
Takes a broad approach to describing girls’ development and problems – as children, teenagers, and as adult women
Provides a longitudinal, research-into-practice perspective on girls’ development, from childhood to adulthood, with an emphasis on adolescence
Offers high-quality empirical longitudinal studies by well-known authors within their respective fields
Describes girls’ life situations in a Scandinavian country with a reputation of gender equality and high standard of living
Back cover:
Until recently, boys and men provided the template by which problem behaviors in girls and women were measured. With the shift to studying female development and adjustment through female perspectives comes a need for knowledge of trajectories of at-risk girls’ behavior as they mature. Girls at Risk: Swedish Longitudinal Research on Adjustment fills this gap accessibly and compassionately. Its lifespan approach relates the pathologies of adolescence to later outcomes as girls grow up to have relationships, raise families, and take on adult roles in society.
Coverage is balanced between internalizing behaviors, traditionally considered to be more common among females, and externalizing ones, more common among males. The book's detailed review of findings includes several major longitudinal studies of normative and clinical populations, and the possibility of early maturation as a risk factor for pathology is discussed in depth. Contributors not only emphasize "what works" in intervention and prevention but also identify emerging issues in assessment and treatment. An especially powerful concluding chapter raises serious questions about how individuals in the healing professions perceive their mission, and their clients. Although the studies are from one country—Sweden—the situations, and their potential for successful intervention, transcend national boundaries, including:
• Adolescent and adult implications of pubertal timing.
• Eating disorders and self-esteem.
• Prevention of depressive symptoms.
• Understanding violence in girls with substance problems.
• Lifespan continuity in female aggression and violence.
• A life-course perspective in girls' criminality.
With insights beyond the beaten path, Girls at Risk provides a wealth of information for researchers, clinicians and related professionals, and graduate students in child and school psychology; psychiatry; education; social work; psychotherapy and counseling; and public health.
Contents:
Chapter 1. Girls at Risk in their own Right; Anna-Karin Andershed.- Chapter 2. Adolescent and Adult Implications of Girls’ Pubertal Timing; Therése Skoog.- Chapter 3. Eating Disorders and Self-Esteem; Elisabeth Welch, Ata Ghaderi; Chapter 4. Prevention of Depressive Symptoms Among Adolescent Girls; Britt-Marie Treutiger, Lene Lindberg.- Chapter 5. Understanding Violence in Girls With Substance Misuse Problems; Bonamy R. Oliver, Sheilagh Hodgins.- Chapter 6. Life-Span Continuity in Female Aggression and Violence; Anna-Karin Andershed, Debra J. Pepler.- Chapter 7. A Life Course Perspective on Girls’ Criminality; Marie Torstensson Levander, Frida Andersson, Sten Levander.- Chapter 8. What Works For Girls With Conduct Problems?; Pia Enebrink.- Chapter 9. The Trouble With “Troubled Girls”; Margareta Hydén, Carolina Øverlien.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Springer New York)
Publication date: August, 2012
Pages: 205
Weight: 467g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: General Practice, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy
Publisher recommends
From the same series
CUSTOMER REVIEWS
From the reviews:
“Examining the lives of at-risk girls is an important undertaking. Anna-karin Andershed takes on this challenge in her edited volume, Girls at Risk: Swedish Longitudinal Research on Adjustment. In it, she includes a collection of studies conducted by scholars who focus on girls’ involvement in aggression and violent behavior. The target audience includes researchers, clinicians, and other practitioners who work with high-risk females.” (Norman A. White, PsycCRITIQUES, Vol. 58 (45), November, 2013)