Moving toward a global psychology: Changing theories and practice to meet the needs of a changing world. |
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Authors: | Mays, Vickie M. Rubin, Jeffrey Sabourin, Michel Walker, Lenore |
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Abstract: | Increasingly, the United States is becoming internationalized as a result of sophisticated communication technologies that put us in touch with countries known previously to only a few, through economic development and multinational investment, and by the immigration of people who are sometimes fleeing hostile homelands. US citizens, like others abroad, will need to be responsive to the demands of a multiethnic, multiracial, and multinational society. The challenges of this changing world can and will range from such dilemmas as ethical decisions of who can and will have access to expensive technology that saves and prolongs life; to the development of conflict management strategies for peaceful coexistence with neighbors whose behaviors, beliefs, and values are strongly shaped by their religious, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds and socioeconomic circumstances. With the inauguration of this section, US psychology is invited to consider its contribution to meeting the needs of a changing society. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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