Abstract
Social changes in indigenous Maya communities in Chiapas, Mexico toward increasing levels of formal education, commercialization, and urbanization are transforming traditional Maya developmental pathways toward adulthood. This mixed-methods study is based on interviews with a sample of 14 first-generation Maya university students who have also undergone a transition from a rural to an urban environment, either with their families or as part of their educational process. Greenfield’s theory of social change and human development suggests that formal education and urbanization shift developmental pathways in the direction of increasing values for individual autonomy. This study supports Greenfield’s theory: students perceive they are departing from traditional values by endorsing notions of choice, exploration, self-fulfillment, expanded norms for behavior, and gender equality. However, change is a gradual process of negotiating a pathway through old and new values. Qualitative analyses of interviews reveal how Maya university students are working to harmonize new values of independence, self-fulfillment, and gender equality with the traditional values of respect for elders and family obligation. The study concludes that formal education and urbanization are forces that create conditions for changes in developmental pathways toward adulthood consistent with the characteristics of emerging adulthood. This study adds to a growing body of literature documenting particular manifestations of emerging adulthood in developing countries around the world and shows how emerging adulthood may be a key developmental period connected to the socialization of individualistic values.
|
Ackerman, F., Wise, T. A., Gallagher, K. P., Ney, L., Flores, R. (2003). Free trade, corn, and the environment: Environmental impacts of US-Mexico corn trade under NAFTA. Trade and environment in North America: Key findings for agriculture and energy (GDAE Working Paper No. 03-06). Montreal, Québec, Canada: North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation. Google Scholar | |
|
Acock, A. C., Fuller, T. (1984). The attitude-behavior relationship in parental influence: Circular mobility in Thailand. Social Forces, 62, 973-994. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Arnett, J. J. (1998). Learning to stand alone: The contemporary American transition to adulthood in cultural and historical context. Human Development, 41, 295-315. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Arnett, J. J. (2000). Emerging adulthood: A theory of development from the late teens through the twenties. American Psychologist, 55, 469-480. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI | |
|
Arnett, J. J. (2004). Emerging adulthood: The winding road from the late teens through the twenties. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Arnett, J. J. (2010). Emerging adulthood(s): The cultural psychology of a new life stage. In Jensen, L. A. (Ed.), Bridging cultural and developmental psychology: New syntheses in theory, research, and policy (pp. 255-275). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Arnett, J. J., Galambos, N. L. (2003). New directions for child and adolescent development: Exploring cultural conceptions of the transition to adulthood. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Google Scholar | |
|
Bradley, C . (1995). Women’s empowerment and fertility decline in western Kenya. In Greenhalgh, S . (Ed.), Situating fertility: Anthropological and demographic inquiry (pp. 157-178). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Bradley, C . (1997). Why fertility is going down in Maragoli. In Weisner, T. S., Bradley, C., Kilbride, P. L. (Eds.), African families and the crisis of social change (pp. 227-252). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press/Bergin & Garvey. Google Scholar | |
|
Bruner, J. S. (2002). Narrative distancing: A foundation of literacy. In Brockmeier, J., Wang, M., Olson, D. R. (Eds.), Literacy, narrative and culture (pp. 76-88). Richmond, VA: Curzon. Google Scholar | |
|
Caldwell, J . (1980). Mass education as a determinant of the timing of fertility decline. Population and Development Review, 6, 225-255. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Cancian, F . (1994). The decline of community in Zinacantán: Economy, public life and social stratification, 1960-1987. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Chang, L . (2009). Factory girls: From village to city in changing China. New York, NY: Random House. Google Scholar | |
|
Chen, X., Cen, G., Li, D., He, Y. (2005). Social functioning and adjustment in Chinese children: The imprint of historical time. Child Development, 76, 182-195. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI | |
|
Chia, R. C., Allred, L. J., Jerzak, P. A. (1997). Attitudes toward women in Taiwan and China: Current status, problems and suggestions for future research. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 21, 137-150. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Collier, G . (1975). Fields of the Tzotzil. The ecological bases of tradition in Chiapas. Austin: University of Texas Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Collier, J . (1997). From duty to desire: Remaking families in a Spanish village. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Costa, P. T., Terracciano, A., McCrae, R. R. (2001). Gender differences in personality traits across cultures: Robust and surprising findings. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 322-331. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI | |
|
Dion, K. K., Dion, K. L. (1996). Cultural perspectives on romantic love. Personal relationships, 3, 5-17. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Douglass, C. B. (2007). From duty to desire: Emerging adulthood in Europe and its consequences. Child Development Perspectives, 1, 101-108. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Dreze, J., Murthi, M. (1999). Fertility, education and development: Further evidence from India. Population and Development Review, 27(1), 33-63. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Eber, C. E. (1999). Seeking our own food: Indigenous women’s power and autonomy in San Pedro Chenalho, Chiapas (1980-1988). Latin American Perspectives, 26, 6-36. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Facio, A., Micocci, F. (2003). Emerging adulthood in Argentina. New Directions in Child and Adolescent Development, 100, 21-31. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Facio, A., Resett, S., Micocci, F., Mistrorigo, C. (2007). Emerging adulthood in Argentina: An age of diversity and possibilities. Child Development Perspectives, 1, 115-118. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Feldman, S. S., Rosenthal, D. A. (1991). Age expectations of behavioral autonomy in Hong Kong, Australian and American youths: The influence of family variables and adolescent values. International Journal Psychology, 26, 1-23. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Fishburne, J . (1962). Courtship and marriage in Zinacantán (A.B. Honor’s Thesis). Radcliff College, Cambridge, MA. Google Scholar | |
|
Flood, M . (1994). Changing patterns of interdependence: The effects of increasing monetization on gender relations in Zinacantán, Mexico. Research in economic anthropology, 15, 145-173. Google Scholar | |
|
Freeman, W. S. (1972). Problems and problem areas in Zinacanteco married life. In Reports of the Harvard Summer Filed Studies Program in Chiapas Mexico (pp. 21-48). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Library. Google Scholar | |
|
Fuligni, A., Pederson, S. (2002). Family obligation and the transition to young adulthood. Developmental Psychology, 38, 856-868. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI | |
|
Fuligni, A. J., Tseng, V., Lam, M. (1999). Attitudes toward family obligations among American adolescents with Asian, Latin American, and European backgrounds. Child Development, 70, 1030-1044. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Galambos, N. L., Martínez, M. L. (2007). Poised for emerging adulthood in Latin America: A pleasure for the privileged. Child Development Perspective, 1(2), 109-114. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Gibbons, J. L., Hamby, B. A., Dennis, W. D. (1997). Researching gender role ideologies internationally and cross-culturally. Psychology of Women Quarterly,21, 151-170. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Greenfield, P. M. (2004). Weaving generations together: Evolving creativity in the Maya of Chiapas. Santa Fe, NM: SAR Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Greenfield, P. M. (2009). Shifting pathways of child development: Linking sociocultural change and developmental change. Developmental Psychology, 45, 401-408. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | |
|
Greenfield, P. M., Keller, H., Fuligni, A., Maynard, A. (2003). Cultural pathways through universal development. Annual Review Psychology, 54, 461-490. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | |
|
Handwerker, W. P. (1986). Culture and reproduction: An anthropological critique of demographic transition theory. Boulder, CO: Westview. Google Scholar | |
|
Hendry, L. B., Kloep, M. (2007). Conceptualizing emerging adulthood: Inspecting the emperor’s new clothes? Child Development Perspectives, 1(2), 74-79. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Hofstede, G . (2001). Culture’s consequences: Comparing values, behaviors, institutions, and organizations across nations. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE. Google Scholar | |
|
Holloway, W., Jefferson, T. (2000). Doing qualitative research differently: Free association, narrative and the interview method. London, UK: SAGE. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Inglehart, R., Norris, P. (2003). Rising tide: Gender equality and cultural change around the world. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Inglehart, R., Welzel, C. (2005). Modernization, culture change and democracy: The human development sequence. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Jung, C . (2003). The politics of indigenous identity: Neo-liberalism, cultural rights, and the Mexican Zapatistas. Social Research: An International Quarterly, 70, 433-461. Google Scholar | |
|
Kagitcibasi, C . (2005). Autonomy and relatedness in cultural context: Implications for self and family. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 36, 403-422. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Kagitcibasi, C . (2007). Family, self, and human development across cultures: Theory and applications (2nd ed.). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Google Scholar | |
|
Keller, H . (2007). Cultures of infancy. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Google Scholar | |
|
Kintz, E. R. (1998). The Yucatec Maya frontier and Maya women: Tenacity of tradition and tragedy of transformation. Sex Roles, 39, 589-601. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Lerner, D . (1958). The passing of traditional society: Modernizing the Middle East. New York, NY: Free Press. Google Scholar | |
|
LeVine, R. A., LeVine, S. E., Richman, A., Tapia Uribe, F. M., Correa, C. S., Miller, P. M. (1991). Women’s schooling and child care in the demographic transition: A Mexican case study. Population and Development Review, 17, 459-496. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Lucius-Hoene, G., Deppermann, A. (2000). Narrative identity empiricized: A dialogical and positioning approach to autobiographical research interviews. Narrative Inquiry, 9(1), 199-222. Google Scholar | |
|
Lynch, P . (1971). Gender roles in Zinacantán. In Reports of the Harvard Summer Field Studies Program in Chiapas, Mexico (pp. 24-167). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Library. Google Scholar | |
|
Macek, P., Bejcek, J., Vanickova, J. (2007). Contemporary Czech emerging adults: Growing up in the period of social changes. Journal of Adolescent Research, 22, 444-475. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Marcos, S . (2009). Mesoamerican indigenous women’s spirituality: Decolonizing religious beliefs. Journal of feminist studies in religion, 25(2), 25-45. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Markus, H., Kitayama, S. (2003). Culture, self and the reality of the social. Psychological Inquiry, 14, 277-283. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Maynard, A. E. (2004). Cultures of teaching in childhood: Formal schooling and Maya sibling teaching at home. Cognitive Development, 19, 517-535. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
McAdams, D. P. (1996). Personality, modernity, and the storied self: A contemporary framework for studying persons. Psychological Inquiry, 7, 295-321. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Mead, M . (1928/1978).Culture and commitment. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Modiano, N . (1973). Indian education in the Chiapas highlands. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. Google Scholar | |
|
Munroe, R. L., Munroe, R. H. (1997). Logoli childhood and the cultural reproduction of sex differentiation. In. Weisner, T. S., Bradley, C., Kilbride, P. L. (Eds.), African families and the crisis of social change (pp. 299-316). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press/Bergin & Garvey. Google Scholar | |
|
Nash, J . (1993). Crafts in global markets: Changes in artisan production in Middle America. Albany: State University of New York Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Nash, J . (1995). The reassertion of indigenous identity: Mayan responses to state intervention in Chiapas. Latin American Research Review, 30(3), 7-41. Google Scholar | ISI | |
|
Nash, J . (1997). Gendered deities and the survival of culture. History of Religions, 36, 333-356. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Nelson, L. J., Badger, S., Wu, B. (2004). The influence of culture in emerging adulthood: Perspectives of Chinese college students. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 28, 26-36. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Nelson, L. J., Chen, X. (2007). Emerging adulthood in China: The role of social and cultural factors. Child Development Perspectives, 1(2), 86-91. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Oyserman, D., Kemmelmeier, M., Coon, H. (2002). Rethinking individualism and collectivism: Evaluation of theoretical assumptions and meta-analyses. Psychological Bulletin, 128(1), 97-110. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | |
|
Parker, S. W. (2004). Evaluación del impacto de Oportunidades sobre la inscripción, reprobación y abandono escolar [Assessing the impact of opportunities on registration, failure and dropout]. In Resultados de la Evaluación Externa del Programa de Desarrollo Humano Oportunidades (pp. 5-56). México DF, México: Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública y Ciesas. Google Scholar | |
|
Raffaelli, M., Ontai, L. L. (2001). “She’s 16 years old and there’s boys calling over to the house”: An exploratory study of sexual socialization in Latino families. Culture, Health, and Sexuality, 3, 295-310. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Re Cruz, A . (1998). Maya women, gender dynamics and modes of production. Sex Roles, 39, 573-587. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Redfield, R . (1941). The folk culture of Yucatan. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Rogoff, B., Correa-Chávez, M., Navichoc-Cotuc, M. (2005). A cultural/historical view of schooling in human development. In Pillemer, D., White, S. H. (Eds.), Developmental psychology and social change (pp. 225-263). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Rosenberger, N . (2007). Rethinking emerging adulthood in Japan: Perspectives from long-term single women. Child Development Perspective, 1(2), 92-95. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Rus, D . (1988). Responding to “the crisis”: Changing economic roles of indigenous women in the Chiapas highlands. San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas: INAREMAC. Google Scholar | |
|
Rus, J . (2009). La nueva ciudad Maya en el Valle de Jovel: Urbanizacion Rapida, Comunidad y juventud Maya en San Cristobal de Las Casas [The new Maya city in the Valley of Jovel: Rapid urbanization, community and Maya youth in San Cristóbal de las Casas]. In Saayedra, M. A. E. (Ed.), Chiapas despues de la tormenta: Estudios sobre economia, sociedad y politica [Chiapas after the storm: Studies on economy, society and politics] (pp. 169-219). México DF, México: Colegio de Mexico/COCOPA-Camara de Diputados. Google Scholar | |
|
Sabogal, F., Marin, G., Otero-Sabogal, R., Marin, B. V., Perez-Stable, E. (1987). Hispanic familism and acculturation: What changes and what doesn’t? Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 9, 397-412. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Schmelkes, S . (2009). Intercultural universities in Mexico: Progress and difficulties. Intercultural Education, 20(1), 5-17. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Seymour, S. C. (1999). Women, family, and child care in India. A world in transition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Smith, J. A., Jarman, M., Osborn, M. (1999). Doing interpretative phenomenological analysis. In Murray, M., Chamberlain, K. (Eds.), Qualitative health psychology (pp. 218-240). London, UK: SAGE. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Swidler, A . (1986). Culture in action: Symbols and strategies. American Sociological Review, 51, 273-286. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Tapia Uribe, F. M., LeVine, R. A., LeVine, S. E. (1994). Maternal behavior in a Mexican community: The changing environments of children. In Greenfield, P. M., Cocking, R. R. (Eds.), Cross-cultural roots of minority child development (pp. 41-54). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. Google Scholar | |
|
Tönnies, F . (1957). Community and Society. In Loomis, C. P. (Ed.), and Trans. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Viera, A. J., Garrett, J. M. (2005). Understanding interobserver agreement: The Kappa statistic. Family Medicine, 37, 360-363. Google Scholar | Medline | ISI | |
|
Vogt, E. Z. (1965). Structural and conceptual replication in Zinacantán culture. American Anthropology, 67, 342-353. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Vogt, E. Z. (1969). Zinacantán: A Maya community in the highlands of Chiapas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Wang, Y . (2006). Value changes in an era of social transformations: College-educated Chinese youth. Educational Studies, 32, 233-240. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Williams, J. E., Best, D. L. (1990). Sex and psyche: Gender and self viewed cross-culturally. Newbury Park, CA: SAGE. Google Scholar | |
|
Youniss, J . (1980). Parents and peers in social development. A Sullivan-Piaget perspective. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press. Google Scholar |
Bio
Adriana M. Manago completed her Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology at UCLA and traineeship in FPR -UCLA Center for Culture, Brain, and Development in 2011. She will be joining the psychology department at the University of Michigan as a post-doctoral researcher in 2011. Her research interests focus on the connections between culture change, gender and sexual development during adolescence and the transition to adulthood.

