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- Convenor:
-
Dinesh Sharma
(Walden Univ Fordham Univ.)
Send message to Convenor
- Chair:
-
Dinesh Sharma
(Walden Univ Fordham Univ.)
- Discussants:
-
Byron Good
(Harvard University)
Richard Shweder (University of Chicago)
Thomas Weisner (UCLA)
Parker Shipton (Boston University)
- Format:
- Roundtable
- Sessions:
- Saturday 10 April, -
Time zone: America/Chicago
Short Abstract:
In this panel, we will discuss Robert A. LeVine’s groundbreaking work in advancing the development of a psychosocial science at the intersection of psychological anthropology, developmental psychology, social demography, and language area or cultural studies.
Long Abstract:
As envisaged by Robert A. LeVine many years ago, the human development indicators have improved in many societies as income, healthcare and educational opportunities have been enlarged. Global transformations have led to significant decline in extreme poverty and an increase in working class and middle class families around the world in the emerging economies throughout Africa and Asia. As the technological and global influences continue to challenge the dominant narrative in academic psychology, conflated with WEIRD data assumptions, interdisciplinary research will continue to increase in value and scope, where LeVine’s classical approach in psychological anthropology, combined with psychoanalysis, developmental psychology, demography, language or area research and population studies, offers a path forward. The essays collected here in addition to honoring LeVine’s work, hold out the promise of a real convergence between psychology and anthropology or the development of a psychosocial science -- a confluence between positivism and relativism, empiricism and ethnography, and social sciences and human sciences. The scientific search for universal laws and the ever expanding search for cultural meanings in the diverse communities around the world must continue simultaneously and in conjunction with the transnational or global challenges we face today. In this panel, we will discuss LeVine’s vision of an emerging and interdisciplinary psychosocial science.