The Silent Revolution in Lebanon: Changing Values of the YouthExamines the social values and family and political norms among Lebanese college students, within the context of civil strife, a new regional political system, a new world order, and diverse economic and political conditions. |
Contents
A Sociological Perspective | 11 |
Research Review and Study Methodology | 25 |
Stability and Change in Social Structure | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Amana Corporation Anthony Giddens Aoun Arab Nationalism Arab World attitudes AUB and LU AUB students authoritarianism behavior Beirut Believer Catholic chapter Christians civil marriage Closest Group college students Confessional Culture democratization disliked Druze economic extended family Father's Occupation fathers Female Gamal Abdel-Nasser gender equality Group Affiliations Halim Barakat Hariri Hilal Khashan Hizbullah Ibid important Islamism Islamists Issues of Dispute Ja'ja Jurgen Habermas Lebanese Forces Lebanese nationalism Lebanese society Lebanese students Lebanon in Strife majority Male Maronite Melikian Mother's Education mothers Muslims nuclear family Number of Students Orthodox Sunni Shiite Palestinians pan-Arab parents get upset political ideology Political Orientation political system politicians population practices religious rituals pre-war Psychology Questionnaire relations religion religious communities religious sect role sample scored sectarianism Shiite significant social class social group Sociological specify stereotypic Sunni Shiite Druze survey Syrian Talcott Parsons University Press Variable women York