• Title/Summary/Keyword: ethical coping behavior

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Main Ethical Dilemmas and Coping Behaviors of Child-counselors : A Content Analysis (내용분석을 통한 아동상담자의 주요 윤리적 딜레마 상황과 대처 행위)

  • Yoo, Jae Ryoung;Kim, Kwang Woong
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.127-151
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    • 2006
  • This study examined ethical dilemmas experienced by child-counselors and coping behaviors they practiced in context. The analysis was performed for 30 child-counselors in Seoul and Kyunggi-do, Participants were asked to describe a self-report in an interview with the main researcher. Data were categorized, quantified and examined in terms of five ethical dimensions derived from antecedent research. The five ethical dimensions are "confidentiality and protection of privacy", "professional competence", "informed consent", "informing clients of the nature of treatment modality", and "adequacy and effectiveness of treatment". This study contributes basic data for the development of an inventory for the measurement of ethical practice for child counselors.

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The Impact of Crisis on Consumers' Value Systems -Psychological Pathways to Sustainable Behavior-

  • Hongjoo Woo;Daeun Chloe Shin;Sojin Jung;Byoungho Ellie Jin
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.48 no.3
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    • pp.433-450
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    • 2024
  • Through the recent pandemic, this study examined the theory of awe, which explains that external crises affect people's value systems and consequential behaviors. During the pandemic, some consumers expressed a growing interest in equity, while others pursued the consumption of materialistic items, such as luxurious fashion goods. According to the theory of awe, both of these phenomena could be coping responses to the crisis. Based on this, we attempted to understand the psychological processes behind the pandemic's effect on these two different consumers value systems thereby influencing sustainable consumption intentions: one through the new ecological paradigm (NEP) that emphasizes consumers' increased consciousness, and the other through materialism that emphasizes consumers' self-centered side. The results obtained from a survey of 382 U.S. consumers revealed that the degree of pandemic experience increased consumers' NEP and materialism, which also increased their economic and ethical CSR expectations. These CSR expectations then enhanced consumers' sustainable consumption intentions. As sustainable consumption and CSR are important agendas for the fashion industry, this study will provide useful insights for researchers and practitioners in the fashion field.