Giới thiệu về tác giả
Rutger C.M.E. Engels, Ph.D., is Professor in Family
Psychology at the Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University
Nijmegen, the Netherlands since 2001....
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Rutger C.M.E. Engels, Ph.D., is Professor in Family
Psychology at the Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University
Nijmegen, the Netherlands since 2001. He obtained his Ph.D. at the
Department of Medical Sociology, Maastricht University in 1998.
Since then he has worked for three years as a post-doc and
assistant professor at the department of child and Adolescent
Studies, Utrecht University. Currently, he is involved in
fundamental research on the link between (social0environmental
influences on adolescent and young adult substance use and
delinquency.
Margaret Kerr is Professor of Psychology at Orebro
University, Sweden, and Co-director of the Center for Developmental
Research. She earned her Ph.D. at Cornell University, U.S.A., and
then completed a post-doctoral research fellowship with Richard
Tremblay at the University of Montreal, Canada. She is an associate
editor of the Journal of research on Adolescence. Her research
focuses on internal and external adjustment in adolescents and its
role in the life course. Her current research interests include
adolescents choices of developmental contexts and parent-child
relationships and their role in the development of delinquency.
Hakan Stattin is Professor of Psychology at Uppsala and
Orebro Universities, Sweden. He earned his Ph.D. at Stockholm
University and has served as President of the European Association
for Research on Adolescence and associates editor for the British
Journal of Developmental Psychology. he is probably best known for
his research in three areas: delinquency development, pubertal
maturation in adolescent girls, and parental monitoring. His works
include an authored book(with David Magnusson in 1990), Pubertal
Maturation in Female Development. In addition to his continued
basic research in these areas, he is conducting prevention trials
to reduce alcohol drinking and delinquency among adolescents.