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Minority Stress, Same-Sex Couples, and Marriage Equality: A Qualitative Interview StudyLee-Attardo, Angela 26 January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Age, Race, Parity, and Access to Same-Day IUD Insertion at Obstetrician-Gynecology Practices in Ohio: A Mystery Client StudySerpico, Jaclyn J. 15 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Friendship, Marriage, and the Good Life: Stoic Virtue in a Contemporary ContextYoung, Adam J. 20 May 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Neoliberalism and Same-Sex Desire in the Fiction and Public Cultures of India after 1991Ray, Sohomjit 29 July 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Seeing Two People together: Unitization of Romantically Involved Men in Face MemoryTuscherer, Taylor 14 July 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Factors that may be associated with delay to hospital discharge after same–day surgery with intravenous AnesthesiaEllerström, Zandra January 2021 (has links)
Background: There are a number of different anesthetic techniques used in same-day surgery. The aim of the present study was to try to describe the postoperative clinical course and to identify factors that may be associated with the delay time from the surgical procedure was completed until discharge from hospital when intravenous anesthesia was used. Methods: A Quantitative Cross- sectional designed was used by using a self-designed questionnaire. Results: Total of 289 patients were enrolled in the study. The mean age was 40 years and 63% were women and 37% men. Of the 289 patients’ only one required unanticipated admission over night at the hospital. The median delay from completed surgery until discharge from hospital was 2 hours and 5 minutes and the maximum delay was 5 hours and 55 minutes. All patients received general anesthesia with an intravenous as maintenance anesthesia. Important risk factors for increasing postoperative delay were the severity of the postoperative pain and thereby the requirement of opioids in the postoperative phase Conclusion: Then undergoing daytime surgery the median delay from completed surgery until hospital discharge was about two hours. Problems with postoperative pain was associated with a prolonged delay. Thus, in order to shorten the delay to hospital discharge even further the pain-relieving treatment needs to be enhanced.
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Pathways into Social Movement Activism, Altruism, and Self-Interest: The LGBT and Marriage Movement in New JerseySullivan, Nadine January 2011 (has links)
This research builds upon recent scholarship on pathways into social movement activism and the role of altruism and self-interest in activists' motivations for political action. The social movement literature has often focused across movements, looking at opponents on different sides of a social movement cause. Training its lens within-movement, this study sought to discover factors that first led gay and lesbian movement constituents to become activists. It also sought to determine their cohesion around, and their motivation for, their present activism. Using a qualitative methodology, I interviewed a convenience sample of 66 lesbian and gay activists at different levels of involvement (leaders and rank-and-file) across a range of social movement organizations (both working-for and not-working-for marriage). I also monitored news reports on changes in laws affecting gays and lesbians, the public communications of a range of LGBT organizations, and engaged in participant observation in a variety of social movement sites. Distinct patterns emerged with activists who did not work-for-marriage (general activists) being more likely than marriage activists to have grown up in politically-active homes or to have had early exposure to active social movements. Leaders (both marriage and general) were more likely than rank-and-file activists to locate their activism in a disposition that resists injustice. And general activists were more likely to situate their activism in a concern for the welfare of others (altruism), while marriage activists were more likely to locate their present activism in their desire to legally protect their partners and/or co-parented children (self-interest). / Sociology
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A reflexive understanding of woman/woman marriages among the Gikuyu of KenyaNjambi, Wairimu Ngaruiya 21 July 2009 (has links)
This study concerns the practices of woman/woman marriage among the Gikuyu of Kenya. Though widely practiced, such marriages have seldom been studied, and virtually not at all among the Gikuyu. Such practices had been only lightly, and inadequately, addressed over five decades ago by Leakey (1938/1977). This study, designed as preliminary fieldwork, explores Gikuyu woman/woman marriage practices to gain useful basic information to provide a point of entry for future research.
In this study I address shortcomings of previous research on woman/woman marriages, such as the prevalent emphasis on reductionist explanations for their occurrences. On the basis of preliminary fieldwork among Gikuyu women engaged in these practices, and my experiences as a member of Gikuyu society, I assert that women have much greater latitude in choosing how and why they participate in woman/woman marriages than the literature suggests. Such marriages take diverse, and often complex forms that are not adequately addressed by single-explanation definitions or descriptions. Secondly, the study attempts to locate a space for these practices in the feminist and family studies literatures, while questioning the absence of woman/woman marriages from both arenas of discourse. I argue that the exclusion of woman/woman marriages from feminist discourse and the family studies literatures is not an accident, as both discourses have marginalized voices from so-called "third world" locations. / Master of Science
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Counselors' Perceptions of Intimate Partner Violence in Same-Sex Relationships: The Impact of Relationship Type, Gender, and HomonegativityPrince-Sanders, Jessica Dianna 22 April 2016 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to develop an understanding of how perceptions of same-sex relationships affect counselors'-in-training (CITs) identification of intimate partner violence. The researcher examined whether the sexual orientation of a client has an impact on CITs identification of violence, identification of victimization and perpetration and how homonegative attitudes shape perceptions of same-sex relationship violence. Data was collected via information questionnaires regarding demographic and professional background, experimental vignettes modified from Blasko, Winek, and Bieschke']s (2007) study, and the 10-item version of the Modern Homonegativity Scale (Morrison and Morrison, 2002; Morrison, Kenny, and Harrington, 2005). The sample included 203 master and doctoral students from CACREP-accredited counseling programs in the southern region of the United States.
The results indicated that most respondents were able to appropriately identify intimate partner violence. The levels of agreement regarding types of violence varied between vignette types. An ANOVA revealed significant differences between relationship type and identification of mutual violence, victim, and perpetrator. Respondents attributed more responsibility for the violence to female victims when the perpetrator was also female. Findings suggest that gender of the initiator (perpetrator) and non-initiator (victim) of violence may impact identification of violence more than sexual orientation. The results also suggest that respondents' homonegative attitudes impact perceptions of violence in same-sex relationships, particularly female partnerships. More research is needed on counselor response to relationship violence and sexual orientation. Exploring how beliefs in heteronormative gender-roles and homonegative attitudes impact perceptions of same-sex intimate partner violence among CITs is crucial for competent and ethical practitioners. / Ph. D.
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Våldets nyanser i regnbågens skugga : En litteraturstudie om våld i samkönade relationer / Shades of violence in the shadow of the rainbow : A literature study on violence in same-sex relationshipsSundberg, Olivia, Hajdari, Kaltrina January 2024 (has links)
The purpose of this essay was to investigate the exposure to intimate partner violence among individuals in same-sex relationships, the consequences of such violence and the help-seeking process. The research focused on exploring the underlying causes, consequences of violence and what the help-seeking process looks like for individuals in same-sex relationships. Qualitative and quantitative studies were analyzed. Three perspectives: intersectionality, power, and heteronormativity were adopted to interpret the results. A qualitative content analysis revealed six themes: gender norms, minority stressors, physical and psychological violence, heteronormative expectations and help-seeking. Factors contributing to intimate partner violence in same-sex relationships included heteronormativity, societal perceptions of gender norms, minority stress, and internalized homophobia. Consequences of violence included isolation, poor physical and mental health. Power imbalances and the help-seeking process were linked to these outcomes. Conclusions of this essay highlighted the importance of understanding the complexity arising from a heteronormative perspective on intimate partner violence, affecting both perpetrators and victims. Additionally, the study emphasized the significance of support for victims in same-sex relationships, highlighting the current limitations in available support systems. / Syftet med denna uppsats var att undersöka utsattheten för våld i nära relation för individer i samkönade relationer, konsekvenserna av våldet samt hur hjälpsökande-processen ser ut. I fokus för uppsatsen hamnade forskningsfrågorna: Vilka är de bakomliggande orsakerna till våldsutsattheten för individer i samkönade relationer, vilka konsekvenser våldet kan leda till samt hur hjälpsökande-processen ser ut för individer i samkönade relationer. Kvalitativa och kvantitativa studier analyserades. Som utgångspunkt för att tolka resultaten antogs tre olika perspektiv: det intersektionella perspektivet, makt samt heteronormativitet. Genom en kvalitativ innehållsanalys framkom det sex teman: könsnormer, minoritetsstress, fysiskt och psykiskt våld, heteronormativa förväntningar samt hjälpsökande. De bakomliggande orsakerna till en utsatthet visade sig bland annat kunna vara heteronormativitet och samhällets uppfattning kring könsnormer, minoritetsstress och internaliserad homofobi. Konsekvenserna av våldet visade sig vara isolering, sämre fysisk och psykisk hälsa. Det framkom även att maktobalans och hjälpsökandeprocessen var kopplat till konsekvenserna. Slutsatser som kunde dras från denna uppsats var vikten att förstå komplexiteten som uppstår till följd av en heteronormativ syn på våld i nära relationer samt att denna syn påverkar både våldsutövare och våldsoffer. Ytterligare en slutsats var betydelsen av stöd till våldsoffer i samkönade relationer samt hur bristfälligt stödet är i dagsläget.
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