Om Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, 1994, Volume 42
The question of whether personal gratification is compatible with social good is one of the fundamental problems of motivation. The family, an institution that has undergone extraordinary change in the last generation, is perhaps the most profound context in which to consider this issue. This volume is tinged with prophetic concern about the state of contemporary family life and about the (un)likelihood of reconciling individual family membersΓÇÖ interests with those of the family as a whole.
 
The nine contributorsΓÇÖ backgrounds are diverseΓÇöanthropology, economics, law, and clinical, community, developmental, and social psychologyΓÇöand their positions on the nature of motivation in families vary widely. Their views are often disquieting and sometimes conflicting as they offer provocative analyses of divorce, family violence, political transitions, and concerns of both Western and non-Western cultures.
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