ALMOND, G. A. and S. VERBA (1963) The Civic Culture: Political Attitudes and Democracy in Five Nations. Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press.
2.
BEARDSLEY, R. K., J. W. HALL and R. E. WARD (1959) Village Japan. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.
3.
CAMPBELL, A., P. E. CONVERSE, W. E. MILLER and D. E. STOKES (1960) The American Voter. New York: John Wiley.
4.
CAMPBELL, A., P. E. CONVERSE, W. E. MILLER and D. E. STOKES (1966) Elections and the Political Order. New York: John Wiley.
5.
CONVERSE, P. E. (1964) “The nature of belief systems in mass publics, ” Pp. 206–261 in David Apter (ed.) Ideology and Discontent.New York: Free Press.
6.
CONVERSE, P. E. (1966) “The problem of party distances in models of voting change, ” pp. 175–207 in M. Kent Jennings and L. Harmon Zeigler (eds.) The Electoral Process. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
7.
DAVIES, J. C. (1965) “The familyapos;s role in political socialization.”Annals of Amer. Academy of Pol. and Social Sci.361 (September): 10–19.
8.
DAWSON, R. E. and K. PREWITT (1969) Political Socialization. Boston: Little, Brown.
9.
DORE, R. P. (1958) City Life in Japan: A Study of a Tokyo Ward. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
10.
ELKIN, F. (1960) The Child and Society. New York: Random House.
11.
ERVIN, S. and R. T. BOWER (1952–1953) “Translation problems in international surveys.”Public Opinion Q.16 (Winter): 595–604.
12.
FLANAGAN, S. C. (1968) “Voting behavior in Japan: the persistence of traditional patterns.”Comparative Pol. Studies1 (October): 391–412.
13.
GREENSTEIN, F. I. (1965) Children and Politics. New Haven: Yale Univ. Press.
14.
HESS, R. D. and J. V. TORNEY (1965) The Development of Basic Attitudes and Values Toward Government and Citizenship During the Elementary School Years, Part I. U.S. Office of Education.
15.
HESS, R. D. and J. V. TORNEY (1967) The Development of Political Attitudes in Children. Chicago: Aldine.
16.
HYMAN, H. (1959) Political Socialization. New York: Free Press.
17.
JENNINGS, M. K. and K. P. LANGTON (1969) “Mothers versus fathers: the formation of political orientations among young Americans.”J. of Politics31 (May): 329–358.
18.
JENNINGS, M. K. and K. P. LANGTON and R. G. NIEMI (1968) “The transmission of political values from parent to child.”Amer. Pol. Sci. Rev.62 (March): 169–184.
19.
KURODA, Y. (1965) “Agencies of political socialization and political change: political orientation of Japanese law students.”Human Organization24 (Winter): 328–331.
20.
LAZARSFELD, P. F., B. BERELSON and H. GAUDET (1944) The Peopleapos;s Choice. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce.
21.
LIFTON, R. G. (1962) “Youth and history: individual change in postwar Japan.”Daedalus91 (Winter): 172–197.
22.
MACCOBY, E. E., R. E. MATHEWS and A. S. MORTON (1954) “Youth and political change.”Public Opinion Q.18 (Spring): 23–39.
23.
NIEMI, R. G. (1967) A Methodological Study of Political Socialization in Family. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Michigan.
24.
NISHIHIRA S. (1963) Nihonjin no iken. Tokyo: Seishind.
25.
NISHIHIRA S. (1964a) “Seinens no hoshuka towa nanika.”Asahi Jnuru6 (July 26): 12–19.
26.
NISHIHIRA S. (1964b) “Are young people becoming more conservative?”J. of Social and Pol. Ideas in Japan1 (December): 137–143.
27.
SPIRO, M. (1955) “The acculturation of American ethnic groups.”Amer. Anthropologist57 (December): 1240–1252.
28.
VOGEL, E. F. (1967) “Kinship structure, migration to the city, and modernization, ” pp. 91–111 in R. P. Dore (ed.) Aspects of Social Change in Modern Japan. Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press.
29.
WARD, R. E. (1967) Japanapos;s Political System. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.