
Interacción y Perspectiva. Revista de Trabajo Social Vol. 14 N
o
3 / octubre-diciembre, 2024 
 
684 
 
down  your  values  and  concepts  at  home,  then  the  child  will  be  able  to  do  just 
fine…children  are  smart  nowadays,  they  memorize  information  well,  and  today  they 
could well be explained what harm and good their phones bring to them (mother, 40 
years old, three children, multigenerational family, Ingushetia). 
The modernization of society in the world manifests in a transition from traditional 
to secular-rational values (according to Inglehart and Welzel's map of values). However, 
the North Caucasus society is experiencing the influence of dynamically changing Islamic 
institutions and reanimating traditional norms and values, on the one hand, and modern 
and post-modern values, on the other. This is a unique challenge to parents in socializing 
children  in  this  region.  In this  respect,  almost  all  the  surveyed  families  point  to  the 
institutions  of  tradition  and  Islam  as  vital  rescue  mechanisms  and  levers  in  child 
upbringing in today's conditions. 
- I believe that  all our traditions  and honoring our elders  in Dagestani society are 
respectful  attitude  toward  our  parents,  hospitality,  i.e.,  welcoming  guests,  personal 
family holidays, such as birthdays, weddings, mawlids, home clean-ups, which nurture 
care for the home, joint recreation, such as picnics, walks – all this helps us to bring up 
our children (man, 36 years old, three children, raising children alone with his parents, 
Dagestan). 
- (details of traditional upbringing) I speak about the attitude of a sister to brother 
and brother to sister, what all this should be like according to tradition. I tell about how 
a  brother  should  treat  his  sister, that  he should  be  gentle,  protective  because  she is 
weak. That is, he should be her protector. I also teach that  one should not judge the 
father  and  his  actions.  However  unfairly  he  treats  his  children,  they  cannot  be 
judgemental,  especially  judging  him.  I  do  not  let  them  do  that.  If  I  let  it  slide,  it  is 
possible that they will automatically treat me like that someday. It all stems from our 
traditions, I was brought up in this way, and so I, in my turn, try to instill this in them. 
Of course, I  always  tell them  that  they must not  let other  people mistreat them, not 
everything should be tolerated, they need to stand up for themselves. Yet there needs 
to be respect for elders. If you see insolence, you don't tolerate it. That's what I teach 
them. Have your own opinion, defend your point of view. I don't teach them to fight, to 
sweep everything in their path, no. But if there is something that is hurting you or not 
satisfying  you,  you  need  to  fix  it.  Also,  you  should  always  tell  the  truth.  (Radima, 
divorced, mother of four children, the Chechen Republic). 
Concerning  the  variability  of  role  practices  among  actors  in  upbringing  (father, 
mother,  grandfather,  and  grandmother),  we  do  observe  differences  in  the  form  of 
upbringing  but  not  in  its  essence  ("Certainly,  the  father  is  always  stricter  with  the 
children, I am softer, perhaps, because I interact with them more on many issues, but 
the father is definitely an authority to them" (nuclear family, Dagestan). 
 
Culture as a regulating factor in upbringing