INVESTIGADORES
BARREIRO Alicia Viviana
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
MORAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH: YOUTH?S JUDGMENTS OF ECONOMIC INEQUALITY AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Autor/es:
BARREIRO, ALICIA; WAINRYB, CECILIA
Reunión:
Congreso; 2021 Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD); 2021
Institución organizadora:
Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD)
Resumen:
In the last decade, developmental psychology has increasingly focused on youth?s judgments of economic inequality and the association between those judgments and youth?s civic engagement. However, most of this research was carried out in the Global North. The problems inherent to an approach that generalizes the reach of findings drawn from WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) samples are now well recognized in psychology. This approach is uniquely problematic in regards to questions bearing on the psychological and developmental sequelae of growing up in the midst of economic inequality, given that millions of children in non-WEIRD contexts grow up in countries where the rates of economic inequality are much higher than in the Global North and also inextricably associated with profound levels of poverty. In this discussion table moderated by Cecilia Wainryb, we bring together four moral development and civic engagement researchers in Argentina (Alicia Barreiro), Brazil (Kendra Thomas), Chile (Maria Loreto Martinez), and Mexico (Everardo Perez Manjarrez) to discuss the main trends of their research and consider how these diverge from comparable research conducted in countries of the Global North. Specifically, participants will discuss Latin American youth?s conceptions of justice, their judgments about the fairness of systems and institutions in their countries, and the links between those judgments and youth?s engagement with transformative civic and political practices geared to change such inequalities. Participants will also weigh in on the main similarities and differences between findings drawn from Latin America and North America.