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6 - Developmental issues: children and adolescents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Herbert H. Blumberg
Affiliation:
Goldsmiths, University of London
A. Paul Hare
Affiliation:
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
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Summary

Children are a vulnerable group in society, especially those societies that are experiencing war and conflict. This chapter looks at their understanding of and attitudes towards peace and war and the effects of conflict upon them.

Young people's attitudes and understandings of war and conflict

Even at a very young age – around five or six years – children have developed an understanding of the meanings of war and peace. In a study of Dutch children with a mean age of six years Hakvoort (1996) reported that concrete factors like friendships and the absence of quarrels dominated peace images; weapons, soldiers and the after-effects of war dominated war images. Children at this age did not have an abstract level of reasoning regarding peace. However, as Hakvoort and Oppenheimer (1999) state, the exploration of the developmental pathways for conceptions of war and peace, and strategies for attaining peace, is an area of research that has been theoretically underdeveloped. Hakvoort and Oppenheimer (1998) reviewed studies that address the developing understanding of children's comprehension of peace and war. They found that there is no overall consensus about the meaning of these two concepts. Different cultural settings yield different results. Furthermore there is ample evidence that results are dependent upon the study design and upon variables such as age and gender of the subjects. The authors argue that variables such as social institutions and socialization agents are rarely empirically supported.

Type
Chapter
Information
Peace Psychology
A Comprehensive Introduction
, pp. 55 - 70
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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