Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Coming Together: A Perspective on Relationships across the Life Span
- 2 Relationships as Outcomes and Contexts
- 3 Child-Parent Relationships
- 4 A Dynamic Ecological Systems Perspective on Emotion Regulation Development within the Sibling Relationship Context
- 5 Romantic and Marital Relationships
- 6 Close Relationships across the Life Span: Toward a Theory of Relationship Types
- 7 Friendship across the Life Span: Reciprocity in Individual and Relationship Development
- 8 The Consequential Stranger: Peripheral Relationships across the Life Span
- 9 Stress in Social Relationships: Coping and Adaptation across the Life Span
- 10 Social Support and Physical Health across the Life Span: Socioemotional Influences
- 11 Social Cognition and Social Relationships
- 12 Dyadic Fits and Transactions in Personality and Relationships
- 13 Relational Competence across the Life Span
- 14 Social Motivation across the Life Span
- 15 A Lifetime of Relationships Mediated by Technology
- Subject Index
- Author Index
- References
14 - Social Motivation across the Life Span
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Coming Together: A Perspective on Relationships across the Life Span
- 2 Relationships as Outcomes and Contexts
- 3 Child-Parent Relationships
- 4 A Dynamic Ecological Systems Perspective on Emotion Regulation Development within the Sibling Relationship Context
- 5 Romantic and Marital Relationships
- 6 Close Relationships across the Life Span: Toward a Theory of Relationship Types
- 7 Friendship across the Life Span: Reciprocity in Individual and Relationship Development
- 8 The Consequential Stranger: Peripheral Relationships across the Life Span
- 9 Stress in Social Relationships: Coping and Adaptation across the Life Span
- 10 Social Support and Physical Health across the Life Span: Socioemotional Influences
- 11 Social Cognition and Social Relationships
- 12 Dyadic Fits and Transactions in Personality and Relationships
- 13 Relational Competence across the Life Span
- 14 Social Motivation across the Life Span
- 15 A Lifetime of Relationships Mediated by Technology
- Subject Index
- Author Index
- References
Summary
The chapter addresses mechanisms and processes underlying the life span ontogeny of social motivation. Six propositions on the life span development of personal relationships are presented. From birth to death individuals are active agents, who coregulate the structure, function, and quality of their social worlds in accordance with their age-specific needs and resources. An individual's developmental resources determine the lifelong salience and outcomes of two kinds of basic goal commitments, a striving for social agency and a striving for belongingness in one's social world. The interplay and dynamic between these two sets of goals determines an individual's interpersonal functioning and competence. A goal-resource-congruence model of social self-regulation suggests that individuals may benefit from matching their social strivings to their resources and potentials.
Why do individuals seek to maintain personal relationships over time? Few issues appear as self-evident and yet at the same time inexplicable. At birth everyone has a mother and a father. Most people have siblings, uncles and aunts, cousins, nephews and nieces. Very rarely do people grow up without an intimate partner, a close friend, or acquaintances. It seems impossible to imagine a well-functioning society without the networks of strong and weak ties that transmit social information, sanction desirable or undesirable behaviors, and provide a social backup in times of misery (Fiske, 1992; Granovetter, 1973; Parsons, 1961; Wiese, 1955). An individual's personal network of relationships constitutes a complex structure and is as much an outcome as it is a determinant of behavioral development.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Growing TogetherPersonal Relationships Across the Life Span, pp. 341 - 367Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
References
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