scholarly journals SYSTEM OF INTERPRETATION OF FRIENDLY RELATIONS IN EARLY YOUNG AGE IN THE AGE OF CHANGE

2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 120-125
Author(s):  
N. M. DUBRAVSKA ◽  
E. L. MACHUSHNYK

 The article explores the peculiarities of understanding and attitude to the phenomenon of friendship of young people. It is revealed that, as a whole, the researchers understand the value of friendship and strive for true friendship. It is determined that the vast majority of those interviewed have and care for friends. It is established that some young men tend to be uncritically perceived by their friends. It is revealed that the data obtained allow further educational influence on young people in order to form a true understanding of their friendly relations. Some young men and women are found to be uncritically perceived by their friends. It is revealed that the data obtained allow further educational influence on young people in order to form a true understanding of their friendly relations. Friendship between people not only helps to solve deep human problems, but also opens up new opportunities for more effective influence on the individual. It leads to the development of humanistic values of the individual, is one of the regulators of relations between people, expressing their desire to provide help and support to other people and to receive from others positive emotions and necessary help in solving personal issues. Friendship is taken seriously by young men, they understand and realize the full significance of this feeling in a person's life. Almost all of the students we interviewed want to be friends, understanding the complexity and responsibility of a friendly relationship, and they are ready to learn to be true friends. At the same time, our research revealed the lack of maturity of the judgments of some young men, who are just ready to obey their friends unconditionally, so as not to lose them. and the position and value of friendship in general.

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2.23) ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
Andrei I. Perepelkin ◽  
Victor B. Mandrikov ◽  
Alexander I. Krayushkin ◽  
Andrei B. Doronin ◽  
Oksana V. Matveeva

1D:3D and 2D:4D finger ratios of a hand are widely used for research in the field of predisposition of the individual to certain somatic diseases. 299 young people were surveyed in total with the calculation of the Pignet index, using a flatbed scanner and the author's program HandScaner. As part of the study, it was identified that the finger indices of 1D:3D in young men is significantly greater than that of girls in the hypersthenic group by 2% (p<0.05). Finger index of 1D:3D is more by 1% in young men in the normosthenic group, in the asthenic group, the finger index of 1D:3D is more in girls by 1% (p>0.05). When studying the index 2D:4D, there were no statistically significant differences between the left and right hands in young men and women (p>0.05), as well as the relationship with the type of body build. Despite this, many foreign authors note the presence of this connection in males and females in other age groups. In addition, according to foreign authors, this index, as well as in our study, is more in girls in comparison with young men.  


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 20-33
Author(s):  
T.E. Levickaya ◽  
N.A. Trenkaeva ◽  
N.V. Kozlova ◽  
S.A. Bogomaz ◽  
E.A. Cexmejstruk

The article presents a study of psychological safety in the structure of values of young people living in an urban environment. Also, the gender factor was taken into account to understand young people’s social expectations and as an explanatory framework for the individual fate of each person. The results show that in both young men and women the value of safety is built into the very value context that is fundamental for young people at a certain stage of their life. These studies show that it is a sense of safety that creates real opportunities to meet the natural and social needs of the present and provides grounds for confidence in the future.


Author(s):  
Elisabeth van Houts

This chapter is devoted to the single life. First it contains a section devoted to the issue of consent: who gives consent for the entry into monastic life, parents or the child? This section is followed by a discussion on single women in monastic and lay environments. The final section is devoted to single men in lay and monastic environments. The majority of single men and women were held hostage by economic circumstances rather than their own agency or choice. The relatively small group of religious young men and women entered their future destination by a combination of parental choice and their own agency. The increase in texts charting the generational battle for consent should be seen firmly in the wider context of a demand for choice amongst young people, especially women.


2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 501-506
Author(s):  
Alessandro Cavalli

This paper discusses the reasons why Italian young people today are not in a position to develop a memory of their own regarding the fascist regime of the recent past. Neither families, nor schools and media, could transmit experiences and provide learning opportunities that enables young men and women to construct an adequate image of that period of their historical heritage. Fascism has become the object of a process of collective removal.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leanne Calvert

Until the late nineteenth century, apprenticeship was the main way in which young people were trained in crafts and trades. Given that most apprenticeship terms lasted approximately seven years, young people could expect to spend a large part of their youth in service to another. Apprenticeship therefore coincided with an important phase in the life cycle of many young men (and women) during this period. A study of apprenticeship not only tells us how young people learned the skills with which they made their future living, it also casts light on the process of ‘growing up’. However, we still know little about the everyday lives of apprentices, their relationships with their masters, and how young people themselves understood the transition from adolescence to adulthood. Drawing largely on the diary of John Tennent (1772–1813), a grocer’s apprentice who kept a record of his time spent in service, this article aims to broaden our understanding of these themes in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Ireland. It demonstrates that, for young middle-class men like Tennent, apprenticeship played a key role in the transition from boy to manhood.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olena Blynova ◽  
Tetyana Kostenko ◽  
Yurii Nesin ◽  
Olena Fedorova ◽  
Olena Chaban ◽  
...  

The purpose of the study is a theoretical substantiation and empirical study of the psychological content parameters of the relationship between perfectionism and feelings of loneliness in youth. A new view of modern reality with its constant changes and increased requirements for the functioning of the individual in society has been substantiated. It is noted that such a view provokes the mass formation and spread of perfectionism and loneliness. It is noted that every day more and more people, especially young people, suffer from the imperfections of this world and the feeling of isolation from others. It has been established that socially conditioned perfectionism, concern for mistakes, doubts about one’s own actions and self-criticism have a positive significant connection with the feeling of loneliness in youth (p<.01). However, rigid perfectionism and self-centered perfectionism are inversely related to feelings of loneliness. It was found that young men are largely prone to self-centered perfectionism (p<.01). A pronounced high level of loneliness was observed in n=18 subjects. Attention has been drawn to the fact that doubts about one’s own actions and concern for mistakes inevitably provoke feelings of loneliness. Emphasis has been placed on important areas of actualization of empirical results in order to develop constructive perfectionism. It has been noted that the results obtained should be operationalized in educational and professional training of students-psychologists.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Cassegård

This is a paper on the transformation of campus activism in Japan since the 1990’s. Japan’s so-called freeter movements (movements of young men and women lacking regular employment) are often said to have emerged as young people shifted their base of activism from campuses to the “street”. However, campuses have continued to play a role in activism. Although the radical student organisations of the New Left have waned, new movements are forming among students and precarious university employees in response to neoliberalization trends in society and the precarization of their conditions. This transformation has gone hand in hand with a shift of action repertoire towards forms of direct action such as squatting, sitins, hunger strikes, and opening “cafés”. In this paper I focus on the development of campus protest in Kyoto from the mid-1990s until today to shed light on the following questions: How have campus-based activists responded to the neoliberalization of Japanese universities? What motivates them to use art or art-like forms of direct action and how are these activities related to space? I investigate the notions of space towards which activists have been oriented since the 1990’s, focusing on three notions: official public space, counter-space and no-man’s-land. These conceptions of space, I argue, are needed to account for the various forms campus protest has taken since the 1990s.


2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-69
Author(s):  
Diana Elena Şerb ◽  
Camelia Cicioc

Abstract The employment level vulnerability - a subject of interest to specialists, and also lately there is an increasing attention of European organizations in this regard by means of directives and regulations .Vulnerable groups are groups without support. The main groups with a higher risk of being affected by some form of exclusion from the labor market are young people, women, the disabled, the elderly, roma people, rural population. In our country one of the characteristics of democracy is that men and women are equal in rights. Young people are exposed to an endogenous risk that reflects their inexperience and also to exogenous risks related to the fields they’re frequently working in. The purpose of this article is to show that the forms of vulnerability generate economic and social imbalances in both the individual and the country. The working hypothesis of this article is that young people and women are the groups most exposed to vulnerability, and this also influences the employment levels.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maryam Shahmanesh ◽  
Nonhlanhla Okesola ◽  
Natsayi Chimbindi ◽  
Thembelihle Zuma ◽  
Sakhile Mdl ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundDespite effective biomedical tools, adolescents and young men and women carry the dual burden of high HIV incidence and high morbidity/mortality in South Africa. We integrated community-based participatory research (CBPR) with biomedical interventions to develop a peer-led biosocial intervention for HIV care and prevention in young people living in rural KwaZulu-Natal (KZN).MethodsBetween March 2018 and September 2019 we used CBPR to iteratively co-create and contextually adapt a biosocial peer-led intervention to support HIV prevention. Men and women aged 18–30 years were selected by community leaders of 21 intervention implementation areas (izigodi) and underwent 20 weeks of training as peer-navigators. We synthesised quantitative and qualitative data collected between 2016 and 2018 into 17 vignettes illustrating the local drivers of HIV. During two participatory intervention development workshops and community mapping, the peer-navigators discussed the vignettes in small groups, brainstormed solutions and mapped the components to their own izigodi. The intervention components were plotted to a Theory of Change (ToC). Following a six-month pilot, the peer-navigators used process evaluation data and experience to refine the ToC in a third workshop.ResultsFollowing written and oral assessments 57 of the 108 initially selected participated in the two workshops to discuss the vignettes and co-create the Thetha Nami (talk to me) intervention. During the pilot the peer-navigators approached 6871 young people, of whom 6141 (89%) accepted health promotion and 438 linked to care. During semi-structured interviews peer-navigators described the appeal of providing sexual health information to peers of a similar age and background but wanted to provide more than just “onward referral”. In the third participatory workshop 54 peer-navigators refined the Thetha Nami intervention to include:· Structured assessment tool to tailor support.· Safe spaces and community advocacy to create an enabling environment for HIV prevention.· Peer-led sexual health promotion to improve self-efficacy and demand for HIV prevention.· Accessible youth-friendly clinical services to improve uptake of HIV prevention.· Peer-mentorship to navigate resources and improve retention in HIV prevention.ConclusionLocal youth were able to use evidence to develop a contextually adapted peer-led intervention to deliver biosocial HIV prevention and care.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 9
Author(s):  
Yogaprasta Adi Nugraha ◽  
Muslim Muslim

<p align="justify"><em>The phenomenon related to the low participation of young people to work in the agricultural sector, it is necessary to be studied more new perspectives. Moreover, the perspective of how agriculture itself is constructed by their social system, in this case, how parents and peers construct the notion of agriculture.</em><em> </em><em>The objectives of this study are 1) to identify the differences between the attitudes of male and female rural youth towards work in the agricultural sector, 2) to analyze differences in the patterns of socialization of parents and peers to male and female rural-youth about work in the agricultural sector, and 3) analyze the differences between the relationship patterns of socialization of parents and peers with the attitude of male and female rural youth towards agricultural work.</em><em> </em><em>This research was conducted in Ciasmara Village, Pamijahan Sub-district, Bogor District from July 2019 to February 2020 using quantitative research methods with a descriptive-comparative approach. A total of 69 young women and 60 young people were selected as research samples. This study found that there were differences in attitudes between male and female rural youth related to work in the rice agriculture sector. Parents were the actors who most highly socialize the value of agriculture to young men and women in the form of involving the activities of growing rice, cultivating land, and harvesting. Meanwhile, both parents and peers have positively correlated with the attitudes of young men and women about work in the agricultural sector.</em><em></em></p>


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document