• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3072
  • 638
  • 558
  • 161
  • 148
  • 125
  • 44
  • 43
  • 30
  • 29
  • 29
  • 29
  • 29
  • 29
  • 29
  • Tagged with
  • 6587
  • 1792
  • 1782
  • 1478
  • 1313
  • 1122
  • 1048
  • 914
  • 735
  • 712
  • 700
  • 640
  • 558
  • 552
  • 494
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
241

Young substance users : modelling consumption patterns, problems and expectations

Boys, Annabel Frances January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
242

Deconstructing secondary school bullying : a postmodern analysis of power and subjectivity

Hepburn, Alexa January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
243

The relationship between stress and coping, threat appraisal and addiction

Devine, Caroline M. January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
244

The connection between child maltreatment and juvenile criminality : within a Canadian context

Sago, Heather January 2005 (has links)
Research has repeatedly demonstrated that maltreatment increases the likelihood of criminality when compared to a non-maltreated population. What remains unclear is how maltreatment directly or indirectly affects criminality. This study was conducted to delineate any existing relationships between age of onset, type, severity and chronicity of maltreatment and age of onset, type, severity and chronicity of criminality in a Canadian context. The possible impacts of gender, parental capacity impairments, and reduced child functioning were taken into account when examining this relationship. In addition, the characteristics of these children were examined to see if there were major differences within this group. This retrospective study examined the complete official youth protection and young offender dossiers of 87 subjects, involved with Batshaw Youth and Family Centres, who were maltreated and criminal during the period April 1, 2002 to March 31, 2003. A survey instrument was designed to collect quantifiable data on each child. Findings indicate that maltreated and criminal children are characterized as an extremely high needs population. Within this group, children who came to the attention of DYP in infancy had the highest likelihood of parental and personal functioning issues throughout their lifespan and committed their first official crime at the earliest age. Multiple regressions indicated that parent risk score and age of first known DYP involvement were significant predictors of criminality. These results confirm the important role parents play in determining their child’s life outcomes, and suggest that parenting capacities should be fully evaluated, treatment plans should be comprehensive in nature and based on cognitive abilities of both parent and child, and focus should be placed on permanency planning. / La recherche a à plusieurs reprises, démontré que le mauvais traitement augmente la probabilité de la criminalité une fois comparé à une population non-maltraitée. Ce qui reste peu clair est comment le mauvais traitement affecte directement ou indirectement la criminalité. Cette étude a été entreprise pour tracer les rapports existants entre l’âge du début, le type, la sévérité et la chronicité de mauvais traitement avec l’âge du début, du type, de la sévérité et de la chronicité de criminalité dans un contexte canadien. L’impact possible du genre, des affaiblissements parentaux, et le fonctionnement réduit d’enfant ont été pris en considération en examinant ce rapport. En outre, les charactéristiques de ces enfants ont été examinées pour voir si elles différaient de quelque façon les uns des autres. Cette étude rétrospective a examiné la protection officielle complète de lajeunesse et les jeunes dossiers de contrevenant de 87 sujets, impliqués avec Batshaw Youth and Family Centres, qui ont été maltraités et criminels pendant la période du 1 avril, 2002 au 31mars 31, 2003. Un instrument d’aperçu a été conçu afin de rassembler des données quantifiables sur chaque enfant. Les résultats indiquent que maltraité et des enfants criminels sont caractérisés, en tant que population extrêmement haute des besoins. Chez ce groupe, les enfants qui sont venus à l’attention de DYP dans la petite enfance ont eu une probabilité plus élevée des issues de fonctionnement parentales et personnelles tout au long de leur durée de vie et ont commis leur premier crime officiel à un âge plus jeune. Les régressions multiples ont indiqué que des points de risque de parent et l’âge de la première participation connue de DYP étaient les prédiseurs significatifs de la criminalité. Ces résultats confinnent les conséquences du comportement parentale sur la vie de leur enfant et suggèrent que les capacités paren
245

Non-fatal overdose among current South Australian heroin users :

McGregor, Catherine Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (MSocSc)--University of South Australia, 1997
246

Cognitive and behavioural determinants of alcohol consumption: The differential roles of alcohol expectancies, drinking refusal, self-efficacy and coping in community and clinical samples

Hasking, P. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
247

Cognitive and behavioural determinants of alcohol consumption: The differential roles of alcohol expectancies, drinking refusal, self-efficacy and coping in community and clinical samples

Hasking, P. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
248

Cognitive and behavioural determinants of alcohol consumption: The differential roles of alcohol expectancies, drinking refusal, self-efficacy and coping in community and clinical samples

Hasking, P. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
249

The social context of familial child sexual abuse: the mother's perspective

Porter, Janet Unknown Date (has links)
This thesis examines the experiences of mothers whose children have been sexually abused by a male adult family member. It explores the relationships between the effect of biographical and social factors on mothers' perceptions and their experiences on learning of their children's sexual abuse. It also includes interrelated aims: a)to identify implications from the research for the development and extension of qualitative research methodology, and b)to develop and extend the understanding of the mothers' role in the sexually abusive situation. The mothers' perspectives and how they experienced the phenomenon of the sexual abuse of their child are central to the study. Historically the mother has been marginal to empirically based research while central to explanations regarding the causes and responsibility for the sexually abusive situation. Increasingly as the extent of sexual abuse as a social problem has been realised, the mother's role has been seen as central in the support of her children after the disclosure. In the literature, however, the lack of empirical research relating to the mother's experiences results in adherence to general prescriptive knowledges about motherhood. The primacy of the mothers' narratives in this study is therefore emphasised. Thirty mothers participated in the study and were a self selecting sample. They were contacted through social workers, self referral through other participants, and a private agency. The study combined quantitative and qualitative approaches. Quantitative approaches allowed the collection of socio-economic, demographic data and characteristics of the sexually abusive situation. This data was used to compare findings within and between cases and between this study and others reported in the literature. The interview guide was used as a prompt sheet rather than a structure of the interview process. The interview data contained the mothers' perceptions of their life experiences and how these affected their responses and reactions to events and relationships before and after disclosure of the abuse. This study, however, differed from much of the previous research in using qualitative approaches and in encouraging mothers to discuss what was of importance to them. The focus throughout the study was on the mothers' subjective realities and how they changed over time, as they attempted to make sense of their role in the establishment and maintenance of the abusive situation. The mothers were able to report their experiences in their own way, and were able to make their own links between ideas and perceptions which were not structured by the research process. The thirty transcripts were sorted and analysed using NUD*IST, a computer software programme for manageing non numerical, unstructured data. From the mothers' narratives four regularities and processes were noted: childhood socialisation in the family of origin, courtship and marriage, relationship to the abuser, and the disclosure of the abuse. Within each of these regularities and processes, similarities and differences were identified in relation to a number of themes and sub themes as the mothers reconstructed their experiences. The study focuses on how they experienced: the disclosure process; their relationship to the abuser, the child and perception of the abuser/child relationship; and who caused and was responsible for the perpetration of the abuse. The mothers' life experiences within different family and social contexts impacted on them in various ways. All the mothers contended, however, that for the abuser to sexually abuse the child in secret required not only the manipulation of the child but also the manipulation of others in the family and social environment. The primacy given to the mothers' experiences gives an alternative perspective to the understanding of the environments and processes involved in the maintenance and establishment of the sexually abusive situation and the mothers' role. Their accounts are local, contextualised and grounded in their life experiences. Their experiences are used as a basis for a critical analysis of family systems theory. A tentative theoretical development has also been presented using concepts from chaos theory and Foucault in a heuristic way. This study has implications for workers in the areas of investigation and therapeutic intervention. The mothers' perspectives challenge views presented in the literature about the culpability or powerlessness of the mother. Their experiences of the sexually abusive environment and processes involved, give insight into the manipulative and controlling strategies of the abusers. While the findings have limited generalisability, the methodological approach, analytical processes and extension of the theoretical understanding could be applied to other areas of social science research.
250

The prevalence of medication misuse and abuse among the elderly /

Muntz, Constance Rose. January 1989 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Eastern Illinois University, 1989. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 46-48).

Page generated in 0.0525 seconds