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Anger : gender and culture differences in coping strategiesBaxter-Boehm, Alva January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Anger and women prisoners : its origins, expression and managementWalker, Raylene January 2001 (has links)
This project addresses the role of anger in violent crime committed by women, and alternatives that are currently available to manage this anger. This has been a neglected area of criminological research, partly because of women's lesser involvement in crime in general and violent crime in particular. The role of anger in violent crime committed by men has received considerable attention and treatment programs have been developed and evaluated. This has not happened to the same extent for women. This project addresses this deficit by reviewing the literature on anger experienced by women offenders. The project begins by critically examining theories explaining the development of anger expression in women in western society and how this differs from men. The focus then shifts to female offenders and a review of literature on feminist criminology. From the literature, issues are identified which need to be considered when developing women's anger management programs. At the policy level, current initiatives in women's policy development in the western world are explored. Finally recommendations are made for the future development of anger management programs for women in prison in South Australia.
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Anger is both a learned and learnable emotionSawyer, Susan M., n/a January 2001 (has links)
Anger is an emotion sorely in need of an improved public profile. Its association with
overt violent aggression has masked its original purpose, namely, to be a useful and
motivating force to engineer our survival. An emotion designed to serve us well in the
face of injustice and threat has become the means by which injustice is perpetuated by
the strong and powerful, against the weak and vulnerable.
The expression of anger is often misguided, dysfunctional and misplaced with terrible
consequences for society, including road rage. Yet there is increasing evidence that the
suppression of anger is associated with negative health-related conditions including heart
disease, cancer, mental illness, substance abuse and eating disorders.
Evidence suggests that anger has a three-stage structure of socialised reactivity,
biological anger generation and environmentally acquired action and expression.
As a result of this six-year research study, ten key principles of anger expression have
emerged, suggesting that anger can be learned in both informal and formal institutional
education by both children and adults.
These principles were incorporated into a pilot program aimed to educate rather than
eliminate anger expression, in a health promotion program involving 25 self-selected
Canberra women. This program formed part of a wider study of acquired anger management experiences through questionnaires and in-depth interviews.
Results from the study are presented as a core of learned and learnable knowledge
about anger, as modules of information. These modules can be adapted and modified
for any learning forum, including schools, adult education, career-related education and
inservice training. Suggestions for the packaging of these component parts are provided,
together with guidelines for reaching target groups.
This thesis contends that each individual has the right to know and utilise this
information and can use anger to achieve beneficial outcomes for themselves. If anger
expression is inappropriate and dysfunctional, so will be its effects. If anger expression
is appropriate and functional, then it can have a positive and beneficial outcome.
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"Walking together" : the elements of the retrospective construction of safety in marriages where the wife is a survivor of incest.Graham, Lydia, n/a January 2002 (has links)
Many intimate relationships do not survive the process of working through
issues to do with incest. However, some relationships do well despite these upheavals.
Therefore the focus of the current study was on how lasting marriages manage to
construct emotional safety in order to maintain emotional intimacy.
The relationship issues of marriages where one partner is a survivor of incest
have not been widely researched. Yet it is in the survivor's relationship where many
issues arising from the incest may be played out.
Literature in the survivor area focuses on the need for safety and support.
Therefore, models of couple counselling may need to include these issues in their
notions of healing within the process of counselling.
This study was conducted using qualitative research methods. Focus groups
were a primary source of data. The study examined the construction of safety in longterm
intact marriages of incest survivors. This examination looked at the three-stage
model of counselling for trauma proposed by Judith Herman, and the relationship
between these three stages of healing and the construction of safety.
The research participants included female incest survivors and husbands of
survivors of incest. Participants were asked to individually make written constructions
of safety related to each of the three stages of healing. A group construction process
followed these individual constructions and differences within the written materials
were also highlighted.
Segregated groups met three times, each time concentrating on a particular stage
of healing. A single validating group of the combined women and men's groups met
later to do an overall construction of the notion of safety.
Results indicate that emotional safety is indeed an important issue for both
partners in relationships where the wife is a survivor of incest. There are differences
between survivors and partners about the significance of the three stages. A model of
the retrospective construction of safety has been developed. This model includes the
important elements of the experience of emotional safety that arose. These elements
were knowledge, negotiated control, negotiated trust, communication, how anger is
managed and directed, and managing the difficult times and issues such as the times of
the disclosure of incest.
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Addressing Anger Managment In A Middle School Setting: Initiating A Leadership Drive Anger Management GroupBurt, Isaac 01 January 2010 (has links)
This study examined the effect of a leadership driven anger management group on angry middle school students. Twenty-five participants from a local middle school were nominated by school faculty to be participants in the study. Twenty individuals participated and eighteen completed the study. The eighteen participants were assessed at pre and post test on measures of anger, anger control and personal relationships. Three research questions were tested: (1) Does a short term leadership focused anger management group reduce youths' overall anger? (2) Does such a group increase angry youths' ability to control anger urges? (3) Does this group reduce youths' expressed anger towards others? Study results indicated that the leadership driven anger management participants showed a significant reduction in overall anger. Although participants in the study had a significant increase in anger control expressed outwardly (AC-O), they did not show a significant internal perception of an increase in anger control (AC-I). Furthermore, results indicated that participants showed significant reduction in their expressed outward anger in their relationships (AX-O), but did not show significant differences in their perception of expressed internal anger in relationships (AX-I). A discussion follows explaining the possible reasons for this discrepancy, as well as limitations, modified procedures, and implications for this study. Lastly, the study completes with recommendations for future research in the field of counseling and anger management.
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"You meant to do that:" Examining reactive and proactive aggression and their relations to social and emotional correlatesBender, Stephanie 11 1900 (has links)
This study investigated the relations between teacher-rated reactive and proactive aggression and self-ratings of peer intimacy, peer group integration, inhibition of anger and coping with anger in children in grade 4 to grade 6 (n = 519). Grade and gender differences in the study variables were also examined. Although not significant, as predicted, there was a trend towards significance where proactive aggression increased by grade; however, contrary to predictions, the occurrence of reactive aggression did not decrease by grade. The two functions of aggression were strongly correlated with one another. Males were reported more aggressive than females and self-reported lower anger management and less peer group intimacy than females. Further, females who were rated as more reactively aggressive reported less peer group integration and peer intimacy. Males who were reported as reactively aggressive also reported less peer group integration. Reactive and proactive aggression in males was related to coping with anger.
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"You meant to do that:" Examining reactive and proactive aggression and their relations to social and emotional correlatesBender, Stephanie Unknown Date
No description available.
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The Effect of Anger Management and Communication Training on Functional and Quality-of-Life Status in Fibromyalgia PatientsStillman, Alexandra Michele 01 May 2005 (has links)
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a debilitating condition that affects millions of individuals throughout the world. As of yet the specific etiology of this condition remains unknown and successful treatments remain in their infancy. Although several studies have focused on the emotional components of fibromyalgia, none have specifically addressed the issues of communication and anger that appear to be important among this patient population. The objectives of this study were to design a 4-week experimental group therapy treatment based on successful cognitive behavioral components and add anger management and communication components in an attempt to increase benefits to the overall well-being of patients.
Subjects were 46 fibromyalgia patients recruited from physicians, chiropractors, and physical therapists as well as through newspaper, radio, and advertising through flyers. Patients who were accepted into the study were randomly assigned to either a treatment group or a wait-list control group, with the control group receiving the treatment in the month following the treatment group. Outcomes were assessed using a repeated measures analysis of variance with one within (time) and one-between subjects (group) factor. The five assessment measures utilized in this study were the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ), the Short-Form 36 (SF-36) Version 2, the Chronic Pain Self-Efficacy Survey (CPSS), the State Trait Anger Expression Inventory- 2 (ST AXI-2) and a communication inventory developed specifically for this intervention. Specific outcomes measured included change on fibromyalgia-specific symptoms and physical and emotional health-related status, improvement in communication, change in anger scores, and changes in levels of self-efficacy.
Analysis of patient outcome data revealed that significant results were achieved in the areas of mental health and communication variables . In addition, several notable effect sizes were also found, particularly in the areas of vitality (-.97), mental health (-.76) and pain management (-1.17). Results demonstrated that a brief, cost-effective 4-week intervention can have a beneficial impact for FMS patients in the area of psychological function. Implications of these findings are discussed within the context of the existing literature on fibromyalgia treatment as well as in terms of possible limitations of the study as it was conducted.
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Daily Study of Drinking and Dating Violence Perpetration: The Moderating Role of Trait Mindfulness and Anger Management in College CouplesAndersen, Catherine V.S. 16 September 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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Voices from the Group: Violent Women's Experiences of Intervention.Walker, Tammi 2013 May 1928 (has links)
no / This study discusses the experiences of women who participated in a program for partner-violent women by understanding their views of the treatment process, outcomes and the meanings they attached to it. This study followed a Husserlian descriptive phenomenology. Interviews were conducted with seven English women who used physical intimate partner violence in heterosexual relationships. The data were analyzed using by the method developed by Colaizzi (1978). The qualitative findings suggest the women experienced the treatment as positive and meaningful and experienced personal transformations. Deeper analysis of the data, showed that there were two key areas of benefit to the women, one involving the connections and bonds formed with other women in the group and the facilitators, and the second including the skills and strategies the women learned for managing anger and negative emotions.
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