Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Bad behaviour: an historical perspective on disorders of conduct
- 2 Can the study of ‘normal’ behaviour contribute to an understanding of conduct disorder?
- 3 The development of children's conflict and prosocial behaviour: lessons from research on social understanding and gender
- 4 Neural mechanisms underlying aggressive behaviour
- 5 Biosocial influences on antisocial behaviours in childhood and adolescence
- 6 The epidemiology of disorders of conduct: nosological issues and comorbidity
- 7 Conduct disorder in context
- 8 Genetic influences on conduct disorder
- 9 The role of neuropsychological deficits in conduct disorders
- 10 A reinforcement model of conduct problems in children and adolescents: advances in theory and intervention
- 11 Perceptual and attributional processes in aggression and conduct problems
- 12 Attachment and conduct disorder
- 13 Friends, friendships and conduct disorders
- 14 Continuities and discontinuities of development, with particular emphasis on emotional and cognitive components of disruptive behaviour
- 15 Treatment of conduct disorders
- 16 The prevention of conduct disorder: a review of successful and unsuccessful experiments
- 17 Economic evaluation and conduct disorders
- 18 Antisocial children grown up
- 19 Conduct disorder: future directions. An afterword
- Index
3 - The development of children's conflict and prosocial behaviour: lessons from research on social understanding and gender
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Bad behaviour: an historical perspective on disorders of conduct
- 2 Can the study of ‘normal’ behaviour contribute to an understanding of conduct disorder?
- 3 The development of children's conflict and prosocial behaviour: lessons from research on social understanding and gender
- 4 Neural mechanisms underlying aggressive behaviour
- 5 Biosocial influences on antisocial behaviours in childhood and adolescence
- 6 The epidemiology of disorders of conduct: nosological issues and comorbidity
- 7 Conduct disorder in context
- 8 Genetic influences on conduct disorder
- 9 The role of neuropsychological deficits in conduct disorders
- 10 A reinforcement model of conduct problems in children and adolescents: advances in theory and intervention
- 11 Perceptual and attributional processes in aggression and conduct problems
- 12 Attachment and conduct disorder
- 13 Friends, friendships and conduct disorders
- 14 Continuities and discontinuities of development, with particular emphasis on emotional and cognitive components of disruptive behaviour
- 15 Treatment of conduct disorders
- 16 The prevention of conduct disorder: a review of successful and unsuccessful experiments
- 17 Economic evaluation and conduct disorders
- 18 Antisocial children grown up
- 19 Conduct disorder: future directions. An afterword
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The goal of this chapter is to consider normal developmental patterns in children's handling of conflict, their prosocial behaviour and moral understanding in early childhood, and in particular, some of the questions and challenges to developmental accounts raised by recent research on children's social understanding. Clearly, conflict management and moral sensibility reflect only two facets of the disparate behaviours grouped under the umbrella of conduct disorder. However, a focus on children's handling and resolution of disputes and their moral reasoning can provide a useful window on the broad developmental themes implicated in patterns of oppositional, antisocial and aggressive behaviour within the normal population. If we consider either normal developmental changes or individual differences in children's conflict behaviour, we are alerted to the major changes in children's regulation of their own emotions, their understanding of social rules, their understanding of and concern for others' feelings, and their moral sensibility during childhood. All of these are implicated in the development of ‘ordered’ behaviour, and by analogy, potentially important in the growth of ‘disordered’ conduct.
It is important to note at the outset that conflict (both intrapsychic and interpersonal) is recognized as a major force in individual developmental change in the grand theories of psychological development – those of Freud, Vygotsky, Piaget, Sullivan, Erikson and Lewin, for example (Shantz & Hartup, 1992). Thus while a focus on conflict means attention to what is only one aspect of conduct disorder, it does entail facing some central developmental issues.
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- Information
- Conduct Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence , pp. 49 - 66Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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