“…Equally important, social change within a society can lead to a mismatch between pre-existing cultural values and adaptation to a new environment. As the articles in this special issue show, these interlinked sources of diversity lead to value mismatch on multiple levels: within individuals (Bedouin youth -Huss, Ganayiem, & Braun-Lewensohn, 2018), within families (Russian immigrants to Germany and Israel- Aumann & Titzmann, 2018), between values adaptive in rural villages and those adaptive in the city (Maya children working in city streets- Tovote & Maynard, 2018;rural and urban populations in China-Wu, Zhou, Chen, Cai, & Sundararajan, 2018), between clients and therapeutic models (Ultra-Orthodox Jews and Ethiopian immigrants in Israel-Nadan, Roer-Strier, Gemara, Engdau-Vanda, & Tener, 2018), between educational institutions and the families they serve (Turkish and Russian immigrant mothers, low-income German mothers in German daycare centres- Bossong & Keller, 2018), between educational institutions and their students (Latino youth from immigrant families studying at a U.S. university-Vasquez-Salgado, Ramirez, & Greenfield, 2018), between international students and domestic students at a U.S. university -Glazer, Simonovich, Roach, & Carmona, 2018) and even between educational institutions and the immigrant teachers they employ (teachers from Asia and Latin America employed in U.S. schools- Mercado & Trumbull, 2018). This special issue delineates and analyses these value mismatches and conflicts, investigating their causes and their consequences.…”