ABSTRACT

This book offers an engaging introduction to cultural and cross-cultural psychology and offers an interdisciplinary approach to the key research theories and controversies that impact on human behaviour in a global context.

How is human behavior and experience intertwined with culture? From this starting point, this second edition of Cultural Issues in Psychology explores the role of culture in relation to mainstream and critical perspectives of our discipline. Beginning with an examination of culture itself, as well as related concepts such as ethnicity, race and nation, it goes on to trace historical developments in the role of culture in psychology. Including a new chapter on migration, and additional coverage of indigenous psychologies, ethnographic research methods, and cosmopolitanism, the new edition reflects the latest developments in this global discipline. Also featuring up-to-date research examples and revision exercises, the book reviews and explains classic and contemporary approaches to cultural issues relating to social, cognitive, developmental and health psychology.

Also including chapters on culture and lifespan, and culture and psychopathology, this is the essential entry-level text on cultural and cross-cultural psychology for students taking psychology and related courses.

chapter 1|20 pages

How we got here

A short history of psychology across cultures

chapter 2|17 pages

Culture and itsinfluence

Exploring a key concept in global psychology

chapter 3|18 pages

Cross-cultural psychology: epistemology and ontology

Searching for human universals

chapter 4|19 pages

Cultural psychology: epistemology and ontology

Alternative paradigms in global psychology

chapter 6|25 pages

Culture, cognition and intellect

Thinking through cultures

chapter 7|26 pages

Culture, social cognition and social influence

Social psychology across cultures

chapter 8|21 pages

Culture anddevelopment

Childhood across cultures

chapter 9|20 pages

Culture and psychopathology

Definitions, diagnoses and treatment across cultures