Publication | Closed Access
The Relationship between Conservatism and Psychological Well-Being in Adolescents
25
Citations
30
References
2006
Year
Quality Of LifeBehavioral SciencesAdolescent CognitionSubjective Well-beingPsychosocial ResearchHome LanguageSociologyAdolescenceReligiosityEducationAdolescent PsychologySocial SciencesAdolescent DevelopmentMental HealthPsychological Well-beingReligious FundamentalismPsychologyDevelopmental Psychology
This study investigated the extent to which adolescents' levels of conservatism, their gender and home language can predict their psychological well-being. Conservatism is described as a social attitude, characterised by an intemalisation of the dominant values of the social environment within which the individual functions. Psychological well-being is described as a state that is characterised by aspects such as a sense of coherence, satisfaction with life, fortitude, coping, hardiness, self-actualisation, potency and psychological resilience. The sample consisted of 1 238 adolescents in the Eastern Cape and Gauteng provinces. Six attitude groupings of conservatism were identified, namely religious fundamentalism, anti-hedonism, conforming attitude towards authority, teenage behaviour, ethnocentrism and insistence on strict rules or punishment. The results of this study indicate that adolescents with high levels of conservatism in terms of religious fundamentalism, anti-hedonism, conforming attitude towards authority and teenage behaviour may also experience high levels of psychological well-being.
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