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The important issues of what theory and research on human development can teach us about adolescents' vulnerability, how to reduce that vulnerability and under what circumstances parental consent does not protect children's rights are considered in this volume. The editors skilfully bridge the gap between those volumes which set out legal requirements that govern research on minors and the research methodology literature on adolescent psychology.

Produktbeschreibung
The important issues of what theory and research on human development can teach us about adolescents' vulnerability, how to reduce that vulnerability and under what circumstances parental consent does not protect children's rights are considered in this volume. The editors skilfully bridge the gap between those volumes which set out legal requirements that govern research on minors and the research methodology literature on adolescent psychology.
Autorenporträt
Joan E. Sieber, a psychologist, Professor Emerita, California State University, Hayward, has specialized in empirical research on questions of scientific ethics, culturally sensitive methods of research and intervention, data sharing methodology, and scholarship on ethical problem solving. In 2001-2002, she was Acting Director of the National Science Foundation program Societal Dimensions of Engineering, Science and Technology. She is the author of eight books and numerous other publications including software and encyclopedia entries on ethical problem solving in social and behavioral research. (See attached curriculum vitae.) She has served on seven IRBs, of which she has chaired four, and has assisted many IRBs, including those in federal agencies (the Bureau of Justice Statistics and the Bureau of Prisons), those in private corporations (Interval Research Corporation, the University Corporation of Atmospheric Research) and various academic institutions in the development of their policies and procedures. She currently serves as a site visitor to IRBs seeking accreditation, and sits on the Accreditation Council of the Association for the Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs (AAHRPP) which is pioneering in the improvement of policies and practices of IRBs.