Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T10:06:55.940Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

8 - From Unruly Child to Political Protester and Promoter of an Ecology-Minded Concept of Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 January 2021

Richard E. Tremblay
Affiliation:
Université de Montréal
Get access

Summary

Rainer K. Silbereisen was born in Germany in 1944. He was Professor of Psychology at the Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena (Germany) and President of the International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development. His research program focused on complex ecology-biology-person interactions. Ecology was hypothesized to be a major developmental force. Maladjusted behaviors, such as antisocial behavior during adolescence, were investigated in order to understand their putative constructive role in the development of entrepreneurial behavior during adulthood. Longitudinal studies were conducted on a wide range of topics, such as substance use and delinquency during adolescence, variation in the timing of psychosocial transitions, the impact of social change on adjustment and development, psychological dimensions of entrepreneurship and civic participation, biobehavioral aspects of adolescent development, and acculturation among immigrants. These studies had an explicit cross-national and cross-cultural format. The prevention of maladjustment and scientific advice for policy makers were important dimensions of this research program. With longitudinal studies, Silbereisen examined the effects of German unification and of globalization on adjustment in adulthood. This provided opportunities to investigate how individuals cope with new challenges to their developmental tasks as the result of gross changes in ecological opportunity structures.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Science of Violent Behavior Development and Prevention
Contributions of the Second World War Generation
, pp. 188 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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.)

References

Blumenthal, A., Silbereisen, R. K., Pastorelli, C., & Castellani, V. (2015 ). Academic and social adjustment during adolescence as precursors of work-related uncertainties in early adulthood. Swiss Journal of Psychology, 74, 159168.Google Scholar
Cantner, U., Goethner, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2017 ). Schumpeter’s entrepreneur – A rare case. Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 27(1), 187214.Google Scholar
Chen, X., Bian, Y., Xin, T., Wang, L., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2010 ). Perceived social change and childrearing attitudes in China. European Psychologist, 15, 260270.Google Scholar
Elder, G. H. (1974 ). Children of the Great Depression: Social change in life experience. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Forkel, I., Silbereisen, R. K., & Wiesner, M. (2001 ). Elterliche ökonomische Belastungen und depressive Verstimmung bei Jugendlichen aus den alten und neuen Bundesländern [Parental economic burden and depressive mood among adolescents from the new and old Federal States]. Zeitschrift für Entwicklungspsychologie und Pädagogische Psychologie, 33(4), 221229.Google Scholar
Gruemer, S., Silbereisen, R. K., & Heckhausen, J. (2013 ). Subjective well-being in times of social change: Congruence of control strategies and perceived control. International Journal of Psychology, 48(6), 12461259.Google Scholar
Haase, C. M., Silbereisen, R. K., & Reitzle, M. (2008 ). Adolescents’ transitions to behavioral autonomy after German unification. Journal of Adolescence, 31(3), 337353.Google Scholar
Haase, C. M., Tomasik, M. J., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2008). Premature behavioral autonomy: Correlates in late adolescence and young adulthood. European Psychologist, 13(4), 255266.Google Scholar
Havighurst, R. J. (1953 ). Human development and education. New York, NY: Longmans & Green.Google Scholar
Heckhausen, J., Wrosch, C., & Schulz, R. (2010). A motivational theory of life-span development. Psychological Review, 117(1), 3260.Google Scholar
Heimpold, G. (2010). Zwischen Deindustrialisierung und Reindustrialisierung. Die ostdeutsche Industrie–ein Stabilitätsfaktor regionaler Wirtschaftsentwicklung [Between de-industrialization and re-industrialization – a factor of stability in regional economic development]? Informationen zur Raumentwicklung, 10(11), 727732.Google Scholar
Hoffman, M. L. (1976 ). Empathy, role taking, guilt, and development of altruistic motives. In Lickona, T. (Ed.), Moral development and behavior: Theory, research, and social issues. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.Google Scholar
Juang, L. P., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2001 ). Leaving the parental home for young adults in former East and West Germany: Predictors and consequences in the midst of social change. In Gerris, J. R. M. (Ed.), Dynamics of parenting (pp. 323346). Leuven, Germany: Garant Publishers.Google Scholar
Körner, A., Lechner, C. M., Pavlova, M. K., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2015 ). Goal engagement in coping with occupational uncertainty predicts favorable career-related outcomes. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 88, 174184.Google Scholar
Kowalczuk, I. S. (2019 ). Das Ende der DDR 1989/90: Von der Revolution über den Mauerfall zur Einheit [The end of the GDR 1989/90: From revolution over the fall of the Wall to unity]. Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte, 69, 3537.Google Scholar
Labouvie, E. W., Pandina, R. J., & Johnson, V. (1991 ). Developmental trajectories of substance use in adolescence: Differences and predictors. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 14, 305328.Google Scholar
Laurin, K., Kay, A. C., & Fitzsimons, G. J. (2012 ). Reactance versus rationalization: Divergent responses to policies that constrain freedom. Psychological Science, 23(2), 205209.Google Scholar
Lechner, C. M., Obschonka, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2017). Who reaps the benefits of social change? Exploration and its socioecological boundaries. Journal of Personality, 85(2), 257269.Google Scholar
Lechner, C. M., Tomasik, M. J., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2016 ). Preparing for uncertain careers: How youth deal with growing occupational uncertainties before the education-to-work transition. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 95, 90101.Google Scholar
Lösel, F. (1975 ). Handlungskontrolle und Jugenddelinquenz [Action control and juvenile delinquency]. Stuttgart, Germany: Enke.Google Scholar
Michel, A., Titzmann, P. F., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2012). Psychological adaptation of adolescent immigrants from the former Soviet Union in Germany: Acculturation versus age-related time trends. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 43(1), 5976.Google Scholar
Moffitt, T. E. (1993 ). Adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent antisocial-behavior: A developmental taxonomy. Psychological Review, 100(4), 674701.Google Scholar
Muchow, M., & Muchow, H. H. (1935). Der Lebensraum des Großstadtkindes [The life-space of the city child]. Weinheim, Germany: Juventa (Reprint in 1998).Google Scholar
Muthén, B., & Muthén, L. K. (2000 ). Integrating person‐centered and variable‐centered analyses: Growth mixture modeling with latent trajectory classes. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 24(6), 882891.Google Scholar
Obschonka, M., Andersson, H., Silbereisen, R. K., & Sverke, M. (2013 ). Rule-breaking, crime, and entrepreneurship: A replication and extension study with 37-year longitudinal data. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 83(3), 386396.Google Scholar
Obschonka, M., Silbereisen, R. K., & Schmitt-Rodermund, E. (2010). Entrepreneurial intention as developmental outcome. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 77, 6372.Google Scholar
Obschonka, M., Silbereisen, R. K., & Wasilewski, J. (2012). Constellations of new demands concerning careers and jobs: Results from a two-country study on social and economic change. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 80, 211223.Google Scholar
Oishi, S., & Graham, J. (2010). Social ecology: Lost and found in psychological science. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 5(4), 356377.Google Scholar
Pavlova, M. K., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2016 ). Perceived expectations for active aging, formal productive roles, and psychological adjustment among the young–old. Research on Aging, 38, 2650.Google Scholar
Pavlova, M. K., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2017 ). Social change and youth civic engagement. In Schoon, I. & Silbereisen, R. K. (Eds.), Pathways to adulthood. Educational opportunities, motivation and attainment in times of social change (pp. 279298). London, England: UCL IOE Press.Google Scholar
Pinquart, M., Silbereisen, R. K., & Körner, A. (2010). Coping with family demands under difficult economic conditions: Associations with depressive symptoms. Swiss Journal of Psychology, 69, 5363.Google Scholar
Preyer, W. T. (1882). Die Seele des KIndes. Beobachtungen über die geistige Entwicklung des Menschen in den ersten Lebensjahren [The mind of the child. Observations of the mental development during the first years of life]. Leipzig, Germany: Grieben.Google Scholar
Projektgruppe Tudrop. (1984 ). Heroinabhängigkeit unbetreuter Jugendlicher [Heroin addiction of wayward juveniles]. Weinheim, Germany: Beltz.Google Scholar
Reitzle, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2000 ). The timing of adolescents’ school-to-work transition in the course of social change: The example of German unification. Swiss Journal of Psychology, 59(4), 240255.Google Scholar
Schmitt-Rodermund, E., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2008 ). The prediction of delinquency among immigrant and non-immigrant youth: Unwrapping the package of culture. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 49, 87109.Google Scholar
Schmitt-Rodermund, E., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2009 ). Immigrant parents’ age expectations for the development of their adolescent offspring: Transmission effects and changes after immigration. In Schönpflug, U. (Ed.), Cultural transmission: Psychological, developmental, social, and methodological aspects (pp. 297313). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K. (2014 ). Development as action in context. In Lerner, R. M., Petersen, A. C., Silbereisen, R. K., & Brooks-Gunn, J. (Eds.), The developmental science of adolescence (pp. 457473). New York, NY: Psychology Press.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Eyferth, K., & Rudinger, G. (1986 ). Development as action in context: Problem behavior and normal youth development. Heidelberg, Germany: Springer.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Heinrich, P., & Trosiener, H.-J. (1975 ). Untersuchung zur Rollenübernahme: Die Bedeutung von Erziehungsstil, Selbstverantwortlichkeit und sozioökonomischer Struktur [Study on role taking: The role of parental style, self-responsibility, and economic structure]. Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie, 1, 6275.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., & Noack, P. (1988 ). On the constructive role of problem behavior in adolescence. In Bolger, N., Caspi, A., Downey, G., & Moorehouse, M. (Eds.), Persons in context: Developmental processes (pp. 152180). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Noack, P., & von Eye, A. (1992 ). Adolescents’ development of romantic friendship and change in favorite leisure contexts. Journal of Adolescent Research, 7(1), 8093.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Pinquart, M., & Tomasik, M. J. (2010). Demands of social change and psychosocial adjustment: Results from the Jena study. In Silbereisen, R. K. & Chen, X. (Eds.), Social change and human development: Concepts and results (pp. 125147). London, England: Sage.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., & Smolenska, Z. (1991 ). Überlegungen zu kulturellen Unterschieden der Jugendent-wicklung: Werte und Freizeitverhalten in Warschau und Berlin (West). [Reflections on cultural differences in adolescent development: Values and leisure time activities in Berlin (West) and Warsaw]. In Melzer, W., Heitmeyer, W., Liegle, L., & Zinnecker, J. (Eds.), Osteuropäische Jugend im Wandel. Ergebnisse vergleichender Jugendforschung in der Sowjetunion, Polen, Ungarn und der ehemaligen DDR (pp. 86100). Weinheim/München, Germany: Juventa.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Titzmann, P. F., Michel, A., Sagi-Schwartz, A., & Lavee, Y. (2012 ). The role of developmental transitions in psychosocial competence: A comparison of native and immigrant young people in Germany. In Masten, A. S., Liebkind, K., & Hernandez, D. J. (Eds.), Realizing the potential of immigrant youth (pp. 324358). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Titzmann, P. F., & Shavit, Y. (Eds.). (2014). The challenges of diaspora migration: Interdisciplinary perspectives on Israel and Germany. Farnham, England: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Silbereisen, R. K., Walper, S., & Albrecht, H. T. (1990 ). Family income loss and economic hardship: Antecedents of adolescents’ problem behavior. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 27–47.Google Scholar
Spaeth, M., Weichold, K., Silbereisen, R. K., & Wiesner, M. (2010). Examining the differential effectiveness of a life skills program (IPSY) on alcohol use trajectories in early adolescence. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 78, 334348.Google Scholar
Titma, M., & Tuma, N. B. (2008 ). Adolescent agency and adult economic success in a transitional society. International Journal of Psychology, 42(2), 102109.Google Scholar
Titzmann, P. F., Raabe, T., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2008). Risk and protective factors for delinquency among male adolescent immigrants at different stages of the acculturation process. International Journal of Psychology, 43(1), 1931.Google Scholar
Titzmann, P. F., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2012). Acculturation or development? Autonomy expectations among ethnic German immigrant adolescents and their native German age‐mates. Child Development, 83(5), 16401654.Google Scholar
Titzmann, P. F., Silbereisen, R. K., & Mesch, G. (2014). Minor delinquency and immigration: A longitudinal study among male adolescents. Developmental Psychology, 50, 271282.Google Scholar
Titzmann, P. F., Silbereisen, R. K., & Mesch, G. S. (2012). Change in friendship homophily: A German Israeli comparison of adolescent immigrants. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 43(3), 410428.Google Scholar
Tobi, E. W., Goeman, J. J., Monajemi, R., Gu, H., Putter, H., Zhang, Y. Y., … Heimans, B. T. (2014). DNA methylation signatures link prenatal famine exposure to growth and metabolism. Nature Communications, 5, 5592.Google Scholar
Tomasik, M. J., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2009 ). Demands of social change as a function of the political context, institutional filters, and psychosocial resources. Social Indicators Research, 94(1), 1328.Google Scholar
Tomasik, M. J., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2012). Beneficial effects of disengagement from futile struggles with occupational planning: A contextualist-motivational approach. Developmental Psychology, 48(6), 17851796.Google Scholar
Tomasik, M. J., Silbereisen, R. K., & Heckhausen, J. (2010). Is it adaptive to disengage from demands of social change? Adjustment to developmental barriers in opportunity-deprived regions. Motivation and Emotion, 34(4), 384398.Google Scholar
Tomasik, M. J., Silbereisen, R. K., Lechner, C. M., & Wasilewski, J. (2013 ). Negotiating demands of social change in young and middle-aged adults from Poland. International Journal of Stress Management, 20(3), 222.Google Scholar
Tomasik, M. J., Silbereisen, R. K., & Pinquart, M. (2010 ). Individuals negotiating demands of social and economic change: A control theoretical approach. European Psychologist, 15, 246259.Google Scholar
Toynbee, A. J. (1947 ). A study of history: Abridgement of volumes I – VI by D. C. Somervell. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Veenendaal, M. V. E., Painter, R. C., de Rooij, S. R., Bossuyt, P. M. M., van der Post, J. A. M., Gluckman, P. D., … Roseboom, T. J. (2013). Transgenerational effects of prenatal exposure to the 1944–45 Dutch famine. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 120(5), 548554.Google Scholar
von Humboldt, A. (1799). Alexander von Humboldt an den Herausgeber aus Corunna am 5. Jun (i) 1799. Jahrbücher der Berg- und Hüttenkunde, 4, 399401.Google Scholar
Weichold, K., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2014 ). Suchtprävention in der Schule: IPSY–Ein Lebenskompetenzenprogramm für die Klassenstufen 5–7 [Prevention of substance use in schools. IPSY – A life-skills program for Grades 5–7]. Göttingen, Germany: Hogrefe Verlag.Google Scholar
Wiesner, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (1998 ). Belastungen in frühen Lebensjahren und delinquentes Verhalten bei Frühadoleszenten in Ost und West [Adversities in early life and delinquency of early adolescents in East and West]. In Oswald, H. (Ed.), Sozialisation und Entwicklung in den neuen Bundesländern (2. Beiheft der Zeitschrift für Soziologie der Erziehung und Sozialisation (pp. 137153). Weinheim, Germany: Juventa.Google Scholar
Wiesner, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2003 ). Trajectories of delinquent behaviour in adolescence and their covariates: Relations with initial and time-averaged factors. Journal of Adolescence, 26(6), 753771.Google Scholar
Zhou, M., Zhou, Y., Zhang, J., Obschonka, M., & Silbereisen, R. K. (2019 ). Person–city personality fit and entrepreneurial success: An explorative study in China. International Journal of Psychology, 54(2), 155163.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] 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
×