The growth of political ideas and their expression among young activists
- 1 June 1974
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Youth and Adolescence
- Vol. 3 (2) , 105-133
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02215171
Abstract
Two studies were conducted. In the first, developmental information was gathered on young people's efforts to construct and elaborate on an ideal society. The subjects were 54 white middle-class boys, equally divided among 8−, 11−, and 16-year-olds. The interview protocols suggested a typology consisting of (1) a personalistic, nongovernmental construction of society, based on the child's own life space, with a concern for biological needs such as food and shelter; (2) a construction of specific but unrelated governmental institutions; (3) a better-organized conception of how institutions are interrelated; (4) a commitment to abstract principles. In the second investigation, the task and typology were applied to the study of high school left-wing activists and nonactivists −93 in all. The activists were not clearly more committed to abstract principles, although they were entertaining utopian possibilities of a society with few laws. But the surprising finding was the activists' resemblance to the youngest children (type I); they too constructed a personalistic society potentially within their own life space and were concerned with biological life-supportive issues.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Young Activists' Conceptions of an Ideal SocietyYouth & Society, 1972
- The Development of Policy Thinking in AdolescenceAmerican Political Science Review, 1971
- Developing Senses of Law and Legal JusticeJournal of Social Issues, 1971
- Legal Guarantees of Individual Freedom: A Cross‐National Study of the Development of Political ThoughtJournal of Social Issues, 1971
- Growth of the idea of law in adolescence.Developmental Psychology, 1969
- Intelligence, Individual Differences, and Learning: An Approach to Political SocializationBritish Journal of Sociology, 1969
- Moral reasoning of young adults: Political-social behavior, family background, and personality correlates.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1968
- The Liberated Generation: An Exploration of the Roots of Student Protest1Journal of Social Issues, 1967
- Growth of political ideas in adolescence: The sense of community.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1966
- The Child's Political WorldMidwest Journal of Political Science, 1962