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Part 1. Methods of Studying Popularity. W. M. Bukowski, Popularity as a Social Concept: Meanings and Significance. A. H. N. Cillessen, P. E. L. Marks, Conceptualizing and Measuring Popularity. D. E. Merten, ing There Awhile: An Ethnographic Perspective on Popularity. Part 2. Development of Popularity. L. Mayeux, J. J. Houser, K. D. Dyches, Social Acceptance and Popularity: Two Distinct Forms of Peer Status. A. J. Rose, G. C. Glick, R. L. Smith, Popularity and Gender: The Two Cultures of Boys and Girls. A. D. Pellegrini, C. J. Roseth, M. J. Van Ryzin, D. W. Solberg, Popularity as a Form of Social Dominance: An Evolutionary Perspective. J. W. Aikins, S. D. Litwack, Prosocial Skills, Social Competence, and Popularity. Part 3. Popularity in Context. B. B. Brown, Popularity in Peer Group Perspective: The Role of Status in Adolescent Peer Systems. A. Bellmore, A. Nishina, S. Graham, Peer Popularity in the Context of Ethnicity. Part 4. Popularity and Adjustment. M. J. Sandstrom, The Power of Popularity: Influence Processes in Childhood and Adolescence. D. Schwartz, A. H. Gorman, The High Price of High Status: Popularity as a Mechanism of Risk. Part 5. Integration. A. H. N. Cillessen, Toward a Theory of Popularity.