Spelling suggestions: "subject:"bingle mothers."" "subject:"bringle mothers.""
81 |
Work, care and social inclusion : lone motherhood under New LabourWhitworth, Adam January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
|
82 |
The social support networks of single mothers in GuguletuNel, Annele 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M Social Work)--Stellenbosch University, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This research investigates the social support networks of single mothers.
The basic premise underlying this research is the importance of social workers'
understanding of the social support networks of single mothers. It is necessary for
social workers to identify the social support systems that exist in a social support
network, and to select those systems which would be relevant to the needs of the
single mother. The aim of this study is to present guidelines for social workers to
empower single mothers to utilise social support networks to fulfil their roles as
parents. The research report includes identifying personal information, issues faced by singleparent
families, the nature of single-parenthood, emotional and functional changes
experienced since becoming a single mother and the social support networks of single
mothers. Knowledge of these indicators will increase the awareness of social workers
of the needs of single mothers. The research report includes identifying personal information, issues faced by singleparent
families, the nature of single-parenthood, emotional and functional changes
experienced since becoming a single mother and the social support networks of single
mothers. Knowledge of these indicators will increase the awareness of social workers
of the needs of single mothers.The research report includes identifying personal information, issues faced by singleparent
families, the nature of single-parenthood, emotional and functional changes
experienced since becoming a single mother and the social support networks of single
mothers. Knowledge of these indicators will increase the awareness of social workers
of the needs of single mothers. The research report includes identifying personal information, issues faced by singleparent
families, the nature of single-parenthood, emotional and functional changes
experienced since becoming a single mother and the social support networks of single
mothers. Knowledge of these indicators will increase the awareness of social workers
of the needs of single mothers. The empirical research involved the use of both qualitative and quantitative methods
in order to explore the theoretical part of the research. This section was divided into
two phases. The first phase was devoted to acquiring a sufficient understanding of the
nature of what single-parenthood with an emphasis on single mothers, and also to get
a better understanding of the single mothers' existing social support network. The
second phase included conducting interviews with the single mothers (N=10) with the
help of a questionnaire. The findings and responses of the respondents were analyzed and compared with the
findings from previous studies undertaken by various authors. The findings of this
research can be used as guidelines for social workers who need to assist a single
mother with a need or problem, and more specifically can help the single mother to
utilize her social support network. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie navorsing ondersoek die maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerke van enkel
moeders. Die uitgangspunt van die navorsing is dat dit belangrik is dat maatskaplike werkers
begrip sal hê vir die maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerke van enkelmoeders. Dis
belangrik dat maatskaplike werkers die maatskaplike ondersteunings sisteme wat in
die maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerk bestaan sal identifiseer, en om dan die
sisteme wat relevant is tot die behoeftes van die enkelmoeder te selekteer. Die doel
van die studie is om riglyne daar te stel vir maatskaplike werkers om enkelmoeders te
bemagtig om maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerke te gebruik om hul rol as ouers te
vervul. Die navorsings verslag sluit die volgende in: identifiserende persoonlike inligting,
probleme wat enkelouer gesinne kan ondervind, die aard van enkelmoederskap,
emosionele en funsionele veranderinge ondervind sedert enkelmoederskap en die
maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerke van enkelmoeders in, Kennis van hierdie
indikatore sal maatskaplike werkers se bewustheid van die behoeftes van enkel
moeders verhoog. Vir die empiriese navorsing is kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe metodes gebruik om die
teoretiese aspekte van die navorsing te ondersoek. Hierdie afdeling is in twee fases
verdeel. Die eerste fase is uitgevoer om genoegsame begrip te verkry van die aard van
enkelouerskap met die klem op enkelmoeders, asook om 'n beter begrip te kry van die
enkelmoeder se bestaande maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerk. Die tweede fase
behels die voer van onderhoude met enkelmoeders (N=10) met behulp van 'n vraelys,
in Guguletu. Resultate en respondense is ontleed en vergelyk met die bevindinge van vorige studies
wat deur verskillende navorsers onderneem is. Die bevindinge van die navorsing kan
deur maatskaplike werkers gebruik word as riglyne om enkelmoeders wat behoeftes
of probleme ondervind by te staan, en die enkel moeder meer spesifiek kan help om
haar maatskaplike ondersteuningsnetwerk te gebruik.
|
83 |
Encapsulating subjectification--: reappraisal of the possibilities and constraints for mothering alone on welfare.January 1998 (has links)
Ng Chor-kong. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 163-171). / Abstract also in Chinese. / Chapter Chapter 1: --- "Introduction: The reappraisal of the possibilities and constraints of the ""autonomous mothering""" --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter 2: --- "Encapsulating subjectivity: Understanding mothering through the ""subjectivistic"" coping strategy" --- p.37 / Chapter Chapter 3: --- Reflection of self: Anxiety in coming to terms with lives on welfare --- p.76 / Chapter Chapter 4: --- Problematization of self: Anxiety of interacting with the welfare agency --- p.105 / Chapter Chapter 5: --- Recognition of self: Active subjects passively resisting marginalization --- p.122 / Chapter Chapter 6: --- Conclusion: Subjectification of self through practice --- p.153 / Bibliography --- p.163
|
84 |
Correlations of Race, Ethnicity, and Family Relations on the Developmental Outcomes of Youth Raised in Single Mother Headed HouseholdsWatson, Sabrina Blount 01 January 2016 (has links)
Despite known risk factors associated with families headed by single mothers such as delinquency, substance abuse, and early unprotected sex, researchers have rarely focused on how family relations positively shape the developmental trajectories of youth living in nontraditional families. The purpose of this correlational study was to examine the relationship between the independent variables of ethnicity, parent-child relationship, and family interaction (including the relationship with important non-parental adults) and the dependent variables of developmental outcomes (social and emotional competence) for youth living in families headed by single mothers. The associations were investigated using data collected from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, a longitudinal cohort study. The relationships between variables were analyzed using a descriptive statistics method. The results of the study indicated no race-related differences in a child's closeness to mother in single-mother families. A significant positive correlation showed a difference in closeness to family members across ethnic groups, by age. Multiple regression analysis was employed to determine if there were statistically significant differences between closeness to the mother or family members, and the outcomes. The findings indicated that closeness to family was positively correlated to emotional outcomes for youth, and a significant positive correlation was found between family interaction and social outcomes. These results may have implications for positive social change by providing public health practitioners with strategies to support positive youth development, altering the future of youth, families, and society which will ultimately benefit from a stronger population of emotionally and socially competent young adults.
|
85 |
Absent masculinity and feminine resilience : a post colonial analysis of media discourses of female-headed households in South AfricaLetsoalo, Koketso Sophia January 2022 (has links)
Thesis (M. A. (Communication Studies)) -- University of Limpopo, 2022 / South Africa experiences a high rate of absent fathers and this makes single-mother households a prominent family structure in the country. There are many framings and discourses of single mother households in the media, ranging from the critical to the negative and occasional positive ones. But in these discourses, do the resilience, strength, and hard work of single mothers form part of the framing of single mothers in South Africa? The destruction of the Black family structure is one of the disastrous legacies of colonialism and apartheid in South Africa. The discoveries of gold and diamonds brought a rapid social and economic transformation in the country, and Black families bore the brunt of this transformation which changed the Black family structure to date. The implementation of colonial and apartheid policies such as the migrant labour system was set to grow the White economy and achieve this goal by getting cheap labour from Black males in the homelands. The migrant labour system forced Black men to work in the mines leaving their families behind as the men were placed in single-sex hostels. This system, therefore, resulted in many households being fatherless and women or mothers wielding the household responsibilities while their husbands were in the cities.
This historical context is important in studying current absent fatherhood and single mother households in South Africa. The study used a historical approach to understand the Black family structure prior colonial era, and how it transitioned during colonialism, and apartheid up and in the current post-apartheid era. This study is built on the theories of post-coloniality, the intersectional burden of femininity, media framing, and it engages critical theoretical scholars such as Homi Bhabha, Arlie Hochschild, Simone de Beauvoir, Bell hooks, and Kimberle Crenshaw amongst others. Through these theoretical lenses, I examined the influence of colonialism and apartheid on the contemporary father absence and female-headed households. The theoretical lenses were further used to examine how the past influence the future and how women's issues are addressed. I also examined the role of media in the (re)presentation of female-headed households. The study tackled three objectives: to examine the media discourse of single motherhood in South Africa; to analyze if women’s resilience in matrifocal families forms part of the media discourse of single motherhood, and lastly to explore the effects of colonialism and apartheid on Black family structure and their consequences in South Africa today. Data were collected through an analysis of a documentary film titled “Last Grave at Dimbaza”. This was an apartheid-era documentary that captured the lives of both Black and White families during apartheid. I examined this film to locate data that capture the media discourse about absent fatherhood during apartheid–which directly reflects the South African colonial-apartheid influence on this phenomenon. Data were also collected from online newspaper publications such as IOL, TimesLive, and News24 on stories about single-motherhood within a period of three years from January 2018 to December 2020 to address the media construction of single-motherhood in the post-apartheid era. The results of the study show that media discourse tends to perpetuate a normative negative and global trend of stereotyping mothers who receive social grants. Single mothers are portrayed as a group that misappropriates state resources, who pocket state money to meet their personal needs. They are thus stereotyped as social burdens on the state finances and contribute to the country's economic risks. Women are portrayed as victims of apartheid without any agency in the absence of their men. The study revealed that women had to find ways to survive or feed their families while waiting for their husbands to send money. However, what is missing in this portrayal is how women in the Bantustans survived under the migrant labour and apartheid laws and policies. Thus, this study found that coloniality seems to continue to shape the Black family structure and that the father's absence in the black society persists and this pattern is transmitted from one generation to another. It was also revealed in this study that when the father is absent, he leaves a trait of absence that his son becomes likely to inherit. Black families are still built from the bourgeois colonialist environment, absent fatherhood and female-headed households are the legacies of colonialism as it is inherited from the colonial background and compounded by socio-economic challenges. Single mothers who are confronted with multiple burdens in raising their children should have their agency, resilience, and challenging work acknowledged. They should be celebrated, not scorned. / National Research Foundation (NRF)
|
86 |
Mat, kärlek och metapraktik : En studie i vardagsmiddagskonsumtion bland ensamstående mödrar / Food, love and meta-practices : A study of everyday dinner consumption among single mothersMolander, Susanna January 2011 (has links)
The everyday dinner usually involves a number of different and sometimes conflicting ambitions that may include striving for self-fulfillment and striving to care for one’s family and society at large. To understand the consumption that occurs in connection with these ambitions, consumer researchers must understand the context surrounding the everyday dinner. In this dissertation theories of practice are utilized as a conceptual framework to emphasize the importance of context. Theories of practice have gained renewed interest within the field of consumption. Yet, Consumer Culture Theory (CCT) has neglected practice theories’ ability to operationalize the consumption context. The aim of this dissertation is to develop further CCT’s practice perspective to increase the understanding of the consumption context and thereby better understand consumption as a social and cultural phenomenon. An ethnographic approach is employed to identify what practices operate within a complex consumption situation such as the everyday dinner among single mothers; how these practices incorporate consumption in their strivings and how the different practices operating within the consumption situation interact with one another. This new approach comes to the conclusion that mothering, defined as a meta-practice, dominated the consumption situation and organized the other practices involved. A meta-practice is one with major influence over consumption and thus a type of practice consumption researchers should look for. Furthermore in Western society consumption situations, like the everyday dinner, seem to be especially important when it comes to anchoring meta-practices and thereby the social order. A preliminary characterization of the meta-practice is proposed as consisting of four different traits: I) its impact on the social order; II) its generalizability, density and superiority; III) its regulation and IV) its stability or slow change. However, more studies are necessary to explore these characteristics further.
|
87 |
Timing of single motherhood : implications for employment careers in Great Britain and West GermanyZagel, Hannah January 2013 (has links)
This thesis investigates how family–employment reconciliation issues associated with single motherhood affect women’s employment careers. The study fills a gap in the literature, which rarely considers single motherhood and employment as processes in the life course, much less in a cross-country comparative perspective. Patterns of employment trajectories during and after single motherhood are examined as the outcome of individual and institutional circumstances. Great Britain and West Germany are used as contrasting cases that represent relatively different contexts of labour market structures and family policy. Longitudinal individual-level data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) are analysed, looking at the period between and including 1991–2008. The thesis develops a theoretical model that assumes differential career outcomes for experiencing single motherhood at different life stages. Higher difficulties of family–employment reconciliation are predicted for women experiencing single motherhood at a young age compared to later stages. The acquisition of marketable resources, which stands in the context of education systems, is assumed to be one of the central mechanisms mediating the relationship between age at single motherhood and employment. Moreover, policies directed at single parents affect reconciliation, shaping opportunity structures on which women can draw in single motherhood. Compared to the German context, Britain provides little institutional support securing labour market attachment for women in single motherhood, particularly when their children are young. Although providing more generous family policy measures in comparison, West German maternity leave regulations are often not applicable to women in single motherhood, and childcare is mostly granted on a half-day basis. The findings from three steps of empirical analysis provide new insights and highlight specific facets of established facts. First, fixed effects logistic regression is used, which exposes a negative association between single motherhood and entering full-time employment. No differences are observed between partnered and unpartnered mothers, but effective childcare arrangements support women’s transition in both Britain and West Germany. The second step of the analysis explores employment career patterns during and after single motherhood using sequence analysis. The emerging typical patterns are observed to different degrees in the two country contexts. On average, more employment trajectories dominated by non-employment are observed in Britain and by part-time employment in West Germany. In the last step, these findings are used in an explanatory framework, the results of which provide evidence for the life stage hypothesis. The analysis demonstrates that not only social class but also mother’s age, children’s age and skill levels seem to foster employment stability and labour market attachment during and after single motherhood.
|
88 |
Social support for the Mainland wives with husbands living in Hong KongLee, Kit-lin., 李潔蓮. January 1996 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Work
|
89 |
EMPLOYMENT OF SINGLE MOTHERS: CHILD CARE COSTS AND THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE EITCBegum, Salma 01 January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation examines the effect of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) on labor force participation of single mothers by controlling for child care costs. Based on a simple model of utility maximizing households that jointly determine hours worked and hours of non-maternal child care demanded, I estimate the change in the labor force participation rate of single mothers following the EITC expansions of the 1990s. In order to investigate the usage of different modes of childcare services, a multinomial logit model has been estimated. The data source for the study is topical module panels of the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) for the years 1992, 1993, 1996 and 2001. These panels were selected to reflect the time horizon during which the policy changes of the 1990s took place. The empirical estimation strategy is designed to deal with the problems of both selection bias and simultaneity in choosing hours worked and hours of non-maternal child care demanded. Due attention has been paid to the issue of identification of the empirical equations to be estimated in this paper.
|
90 |
Bär eller brister det att vara ensamstående mamma? : En kvalitativ undersökning om ensamstående mödrars erfarenheter av att vara en förälder.Holmberg, Emma, Petersson, Rebecca January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.067 seconds