Understanding risk and risk behaviour
OUTPUT TYPE: Chapter in Monograph
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2004
TITLE AUTHOR(S): K.Govender, I.Petersen
SOURCE EDITOR(S): L.Swartz, C.De la Rey, N.Duncan
KEYWORDS: PSYCHOLOGY, RISK
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 3458
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/7140
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/7140
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Adolescents perceptions of the future of South Africa: a 40 year perspective
- WAIS-III in South Africa
- Report on the standardisation of the Grover-Counter Scale (GCS) of cognitive development
- The "good enough" community: power and knowledge in South African community psychology
- The importance of caregiver-child interactions for the survival and healthy development of young children: a review
- Superstition, risk-taking and risk perception of accidents among South African taxi drivers
- Psychology: an introduction
- Introduction: finding out about people
- Africanisation of psychology: identities and continents
- Methodological challenges in evaluating large scale intervention programs: Reflections from the quality learning project
- African socialisation: the application of cross-cultural methodology
- Perceptions of risk about passive smoking among married South African women
- Sexuality of black South African university students in the context of HIV/AIDS
- Religion, psychology and health
- School psychology in sub-Saharan Africa: results and implications of a six country survey
- Development of an HIV risk reduction counselling intervention for use in South African sexually transmitted infection clinics
- HIV/AIDS and 'othering' in South Africa: the blame goes on
- Gender attitudes, sexual violence, and HIV/AIDS risks among men and women in Cape Town, South Africa
- HIV/AIDS knowledge, risk perception, stigma and support among staff in tertiary institutions in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
- Relative influence of social and individual difference variables in understanding adolescent risk behavior in three countries