Abstract

Why, unlike the children in the Soviet Union, is the younger generation in the USA characterized by antisocial behavior and delinquency? Why do Soviet children characteristically have a feeling of duty, patriotism, and positive ideals? And why can people safely walk the streets of Soviet cities while U.S. streets hold peril for human life? Urie Bronfenbrenner, an American specialist in pediatrics and a professor of psychology at Cornell, tries to answer these and many other questions in the recently published American book Two Worlds of Childhood: U. S. and USSR.

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