Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg (1988)
- Carried out a meta-analysis on studies of
attachment in different countries
- They used the Strange Situation Test
- This may not be the best tool to use as it has a Western cultural bias
and assumes behaviour will have the same significance in all cultures
- Findings
- Secure attachment is the most
common type of attachment in
eight countries
- The common insecure
attachment in western
countries was avoidant
- In non-western countries the
common insecure attachment
type was resistant
- The lowest % of secure attachment was found in China
- The highest % of secure attachment was found in Great Britain
- Conclusions
- There may be universal characteristics that
underpin attachment
- This may be the result of the mass media which
spreads ideas about how to parent across the world
- The variation in attachment within
cultures was greater than the variation
between cultures
- This means it is difficult to make accurate cross cultural comparisons
- Grossman and Grossman (1991)
- High proportion of avoidant
children in Germany, as German
parents seek independent,
non-clingy infants
- Fox (1977)
- Studied infants raised in an Israeli Kibbutz by a
foster mother. Infants appeared strongly
attached to parent despite spending little time
with them.