Draft:James Georgas

James Georgas
Δημήτριος Γεώργας
Born(1934-11-30)November 30, 1934
United States
DiedApril 20, 2018(2018-04-20) (aged 83)
Athens, Greece
OccupationsPsychologist, University professor
Known forCross-Cultural Psychology, ecocultural framework
Scientific career
FieldsCross-Cultural Psychology, Social Psychology
InstitutionsNational and Kapodistrian University of Athens

Dimitrios Georgas (English: James “Jim” Georgas, November 30, 1934 – April 20, 2018) was a Greek psychologist, Professor of Social Psychology at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (1983–2001), and professor emeritus of the same institution. He is considered one of the most important figures in Cross-Cultural and Social Psychology of his generation.[1]

Biographical information and education

He was born in the United States of America to Greek parents on November 30, 1934. At the age of three, he returned with his family to Thessaloniki, while in 1940, following the outbreak of World War II, they departed again for the United States.[1]

He studied psychology at Purdue University (undergraduate and graduate degree, 1952–1957) and completed his doctoral degree at Loyola University of Chicago in 1964, specializing in Clinical Psychology.[1] He served as a research associate at the Loyola Psychometric Laboratory (1960–1963) and worked as a clinical psychologist at the Will County Mental Health Clinic and at the Illinois Medical Center in Chicago.[1]

In 1971, he returned permanently to Greece as an instructor at Pierce College and as an external associate of the Athenian Institute of Anthropos.[1]

Academic career

From 1979 to 1981, he served as a research scientist at the University of Crete. In 1981, he was elected Professor of Social Psychology at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, where he served until 2001.[1] At the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, he served as Director of the Division of Psychology of the Department of Philosophy, Education, and Psychology, founder and director of the postgraduate program “Clinical Psychology” and of the Laboratory of Cross-Cultural Psychology, contributing decisively to the development of Psychology as an autonomous university discipline in Greece.

He served as President of the Hellenic Psychological Society (1995–1997 and 1997–1999) and subsequently as Honorary President (1999–2018).[1] He was also a key contributor to the organization of major international scientific congresses in Greece, such as the IV European Congress of Psychology (Athens, 1995) and the 26th International Congress of Applied Psychology (Athens, 2006).[1]

Scientific work

Cross-Cultural and Social Psychology

Georgas worked at the intersection of Social and Cross-Cultural Psychology, emphasizing the systematic linkage of ecological, social, and psychological variables.[2]

He developed the Ecocultural Framework[3] [4], a multilevel theoretical framework linking ecological indicators (e.g., proportion of rural population, mean annual temperature), socioeconomic indicators (education, economy, mass media, population, religion), and cultural variables with psychological characteristics.

The ecocultural framework was applied in international comparative research, contributing to the development of ecocultural taxonomies of countries and to the understanding of differences and similarities among cultures, particularly with regard to family, values, and social organization[5] [6]. This approach constituted an important theoretical and methodological contribution to cross-cultural psychology, expanding the study of psychological phenomena beyond the level of the individual and situating them within their broader ecological and cultural context.[2]

Study of the family

A significant part of his work concerned the comparative study of the family. The book Families Across Cultures: A 30-Nation Psychological Study[7], in collaboration with J. W. Berry, F. J. R. van de Vijver, Ç. Kağıtçıbaşı and Y. H. Poortinga examined the relationships between socioeconomic indicators, religion, family roles, and values in 30 countries.

The work was awarded the Ursula Gielen Global Psychology Book Award of the American Psychological Association in 2008.[1] [2]

His research on the Greek family highlighted the coexistence of structural characteristics of the nuclear family with functional elements of the extended family.[2]

Migration and acculturation

He was a pioneer in the study of acculturation and psychological adaptation of repatriated populations in Greece[8], proposing the transition from unidimensional to bidimensional models of acculturation and policy interventions such as the promotion of bilingualism and the strengthening of positive intercultural contact.[2]

Psychometric applications

He was involved in the development and cultural adaptation of a series of psychometric instruments. Among others, he created the “Georgas Test” of intelligence for children[9] and supervised the standardization of the Greek WISC-III[10], and also conducted important cross-cultural analyses of the WISC-III.[11]

International leadership

He was an active member of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology, where he served as Regional Representative for Europe (1986–1988, 1994–1996), Secretary General (1996–2000), and President (2006–2008).[1]

According to American Psychologist, he was considered “one of the most distinguished figures in cross-cultural social psychology of his generation.”[1]

Legacy

Dimitrios Georgas died in Athens on April 20, 2018.[1]

As a true pioneer, he addressed complex and important epistemological and methodological issues in Psychology, followed—and at times charted—new paths, and opened channels of collaboration between academic fields internationally and in Greece.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Gari, A. D. (2019). James (Jim) Georgas (1934–2018). American Psychologist, 74(4), 513. https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0000406
  2. ^ a b c d e f Pavlopoulos, V. (2019, October 9). Ecocultural Framework, Cross-Cultural Psychology, Acculturation: The “newfangled ideas” of Dimitrios Georgas. Conference on Social and Cross-Cultural Psychology, Department of Psychology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens. https://ccsp-lab.psych.uoa.gr/fileadmin/depts/psych.uoa.gr/ccsp-lab/uploads/resources/Georgas_2019.pdf
  3. ^ Georgas, D. (1986). Ecological psychology: Greek reality. Nea Paideia, 39, 53–71.
  4. ^ Georgas, J. (1988). An ecological and social cross-cultural model: The case of Greece. In J. W. Berry, S. H. Irvine, & E. B. Hunt (Eds.), Indigenous cognition: Functioning in cultural context (pp. 105–123). Martinus Nijhoff. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-2778-0_7
  5. ^ Georgas, J., & Berry, J. W. (1995). An ecocultural taxonomy for Cross-Cultural Psychology. Cross-Cultural Research, 29, 121–157. https://doi.org/10.1177/106939719502900202
  6. ^ Georgas, J., Van de Vijver, F., & Berry, J. W. (2003). The ecocultural framework, ecosocial indices, and psychosocial variables in cross-cultural research. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 35(1), 74–96. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022103260459
  7. ^ Georgas, J., Berry, J. W., Van de Vijver, F., Kagitcibasi, C., & Poortinga, Y. (2006). Families across cultures: A 30-nation psychological study. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511489822
  8. ^ Georgas, D., & Papastylianou, A. (1993). Acculturation of Pontic Greeks and Northern Epirotes in Greece: Psychological processes of adaptation. General Secretariat for Greeks Abroad.
  9. ^ Georgas, D. (1971). The Georgas intelligence test for children. Kedros.
  10. ^ Georgas, D., Paraskevopoulos, I. N., Besevegis, I., & Giannitsas, N. (1997). Greek WISC-III. Motivo.
  11. ^ Georgas, J., Weiss, L., Van de Vijver, F., & Saklofske, D. (2003). Culture and children’s intelligence. Academic Press. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-012280055-9/50021-7



Category:Greek psychologists Category:Social psychologists Category:Cross-cultural psychologists Category:Academic staff of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Category:1934 births Category:2018 deaths Category:20th-century Greek scientists Category:21st-century Greek scientists

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