CONTENTS
December, 1996


EDITORIAL



Bitte Sehr!
Send30th Anniversary articles, teaching articles, book announcements, old Bulletins, and a color schemes
Bill Gabrenya

Letters to the Editor
Will the Real Euro-Centrists Please Stand Up? (Rudmin)
IACCP Congress Lacks Qualitative, Applied Research (Pruegger)

Ruth Munroe
Obituary to IACCP Honorary Member
Deborah Best


ARTICLES



Ethnic Psychology in Russia
Cross-Cultural Psychology in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States
Nadezhda Lebedeva

Megareview: A Dilemma of Multiple Audiences
Review of Berry, Poortinga, Segall & Dasen, Cross-cultural psychology: Research and applications and Brislin Understanding culture's influence on behavior.
Robert Serpell

Graduate Programs in Cross-Cultural Psychology and Education
A preliminary listing of programs.
Carolyn Simmons


IACCP AFFAIRS



A Search for a Better World
Call for contributions to a symposium "The Potential Contributions of Cross-Cultural Psychology to a Search for a Better World"
Marshall Segall

Report of the Treasurer
Money makes the world go 'round
Deborah L. Best

History: A Long Time Ago in the Cross-Cultural (Social) Psychology Newsletter/Bulletin
Progress report on founding of IACCP; preliminary program, 1st IACCP Congress; Culture's consequences is published
Editor

New Books and Films

Availability of IACCP Congress Proceedings
A list of previous Proceedings published by Swets

IACCP Announcements
Sage seeks authors for cross-cultural monographs

General Announcements
Eleventh Summer Workshop for the Development of Intercultural Coursework

Conferences


INFORUM



SIP NEWS: Interamerican Society of Psychology
Description and activities

Michael Bond
Chinese University of Hong Kong

The End of an Era
John Williams, Allahabad, India

Zélia Maria Mendes Biasoli-Alves
São Paulo, Brazil

Nossrat Peseschkian
Wiesbaden, Germany

INDEX, Volume 30

 About the Cover Photo
Contributed by the Editor

Wang Zumu ("Grandma Wang"), eldest of the Wang clan, living in a four-generation joint household in Nankang, Taipei County, Taiwan. When the photo was taken in 1980, the Wang compound lay at the foot of a small hill surrounded by wet-rice paddies.

By 1981, their home had been bulldozed to make way for a highway, and the Wang clan moved into four-story poured-concrete condominiums. In trading rice paddies for concrete condos and cash, resources become liquid and the family members become urban middle class entrepreneurs and investors-but a lush, green island becomes a parking lot. Modernization!.