A new issue of the journal "Social Psychology and Society" (No. 3, 2025) has been published.
The issue opens with a theoretical article by T. Yu. Bazarov and T. N. Lobanova, presenting a comparative analysis of the main components of the organizational environment in companies of pre-digital and digital societies. A theoretical article by I. N. Protasova, “Economic Attitudes through the ‘Theoretical Lenses’ of Institutional Matrices,” focuses on the economic behavior of the population.
The topic of economic mentality is further developed in the “Empirical Studies” section in an article by M. A. Gagarina, E. N. Vikentieva, and A. S. Gorshkova, where the authors link the psychological representation of economic reality with the degree of identification with one’s country and institutional trust. The article by I. A. Ralnikova addresses professional identity and its differences among young men and women socialized in families and in child support centers.
The article by E. I. Gorbacheva, K. V. Kabanov, and A. A. Kosova addresses a highly complex issue — the application of moral prohibition in ethically charged situations among specialists representing different professional groups.
The influence of professional activity on family relationships among women entrepreneurs is examined in the article by Yu. S. Murzina, I. A. Rusyaeva, and E. Yu. Zarubko. The article by O. S. Pavlova, N. V. Tkachenko, V. V. Gritsenko, N. G. Barinova, and O. V. Titova presents an analysis of the perception of cultural differences in intercultural marriages, using the example of Russian-speaking women in the United Arab Emirates and Norway.
The topic of migration in modern conditions, the motives, and the emotional experiences of migrants are also addressed in the article by M. S. Bril and co-authors, presented in the “Applied Research and Practice” section.
The articles in the “Methodological Tools” section echo the topics of articles in the previous sections of this issue. In the article by A. N. Tatarko, G. Ya. Rodionov, and K. I. Nikolaeva, a methodology titled “Assessment of Digital Ruble Adoption” (ADRA) is proposed, while the article by T. V. Belykh, E. B. Knyazev, A. A. Sharov, and V. V. Belykh presents a questionnaire on the “Level and Types of Maladaptive Submissiveness in Virtual Environments.” Adaptation and validation of De Jong Gierveld’s Loneliness Scale and cross-cultural comparisons conducted with this scale among Vietnamese and Russian students are presented in the article by T. T. Chan, a student from Vietnam studying in Russia, and the Ideal Partner Rating Scale (IPRS) is presented in the article by A. A. Provorova, D. V. Semenova, and M. A. Manokin.
Enjoy your reading!