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International Study
of Adolescent Development and Problem Behaviors (ISAD)
Cross-sectional study of American (African
American and Caucasian youth), Dutch, Hungarian, and Swiss Middle and
Late Adolescents. Funding source (1997-1998 and 2000-2002): Auburn
University Competitive Research Grants. Ongoing project. To date, data
have been collected in Hungary, Japan, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland,
Taiwan, The Netherlands, The United States (suburban and rural high
schools), and Turkey. Collaborators include: for Hungary, Bettina F.
Piko, Department of Psychiatry, Division of Behavioral Sciences Group,
University of Szeged, Szeged (Hungary); for Japan, Janice Clifford,
Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Auburn University
and Timothy D. Van Loh, M.A., Adjunct Faculty, Shimane Medical School,
Izumo, Japan; for the Netherlands: Marianne Junger, Ph.D., Associate
Professor, Developmental Psychology, Utrecht University, The
Netherlands; and Dick Hessing, Ph.D. (deceased), Professor of Law,
Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; for Slovenia, Sergej
Flere, Department of Sociology, University of Maribor, Maribor
(Slovenia); for Spain, Ginesa Torrente Hernandez, Ph.D., Assistant
Professor, Department of Social Psycholgy, Universidad de Murcia,
Murcia (Spain); for Taiwan, Chuen-Jim Sheu, Ph.D., Professor, Graduate
School of Criminology, Taipei National University (Taiwan); and for
Turkey, Esra Burcu, Ph.D., Department of Sociology, Hacettepe
University, Ankara (Turkey).
Mobile Youth Survey
(MYS)
Longitudinal study of over 4,000 inner-city
African American Early, Middle, and Late Adolescents .
Funding source ( 2003-2008 ): National Institutes on Drug
Abuse (NIDA). Collaborator: John M. Bolland, Ph.D., Director, Institute
for Social Science Research, The University of Alabama.
PeaceBuilders Youth
Violence Prevention Study
Longitudinal study of Hispanic, Native
American, and Caucasian Children and Early Adolescents . Funding
source ( 1993-1999 ): Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). Collaborator: Daniel J. Flannery, Ph.D., Professor
and Director of the Institute for the Prevention of Violence, Kent
State University.
Tucson Drug Study
Cross-sectional study of Hispanic and
Caucasian Early Adolescents . Collaborator: Daniel J. Flannery,
Ph.D., Professor and Director of the Institute for the Prevention of
Violence, Kent State University.
Transitions in Rural
Alabama
Longitudinal study of Rural, African
American Early, Middle, and Late Adolescents . Funding source ( 2000-2003
): National Research Initiative, Competitive Grant
Program, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Collaborator:
Jennifer Kerpelman, Ph.D., Associate Professor and Extension
Specialist, Dept. of Human Development and Family Studies, Auburn
University.
Religiosity in
Cross-Cultural Perspective
Cross-sectional comparative project
examines similarities and differences across five cultural contexts
(Bosnia/Herzegovina, Serbia, Slovenia, Japan, and the United States).
Collaborator: Sergej Flere, Ph.D., Professor and Head of Sociology, the
University of Maribor, Maribor, Slovenia; the study is funded in part
by support from the Slovenian Ministry of Education. Based on samples
of about 500 college students in each country, the study seeks to
examine a series of specific hypotheses related to the importance of
religion across five religious denominations, namely Roman Catholic,
Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, Shinto and Muslim.
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Project Involvement
Original Data Sets
Secondary Data
Key Variables of Interest
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