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  • 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.
41

Men and masculinities in the changing Japanese family

Umegaki, Hiroko January 2017 (has links)
The shifting topography of contemporary Japanese society is engendering a significant reorientation of men’s family relations. However, exactly how Japanese men are adapting to these broad-based trends, including parent-child relations, demographics, marriage norms, care provision, residential choices, and gender roles, as well as in the decline of Confucian worldviews, remains relatively obscure. In this dissertation, I explore men’s everyday practices underpinning their family relations as husbands, fathers, sons-in-law, and grandfathers. I conducted ethnographic fieldwork in the summers of 2013 and 2014 in Hyogo, through narrative interviews and participant-observation. I find husbands’ view of their wives transitioning from having a culturally prescribed duty to perform domestic matters to simply having responsibility for domestic matters. This opens up space for negotiation within married couples, with my informants providing what I refer to as additional help, which offers new insight into charting the evolution of hegemonic masculinity. I evidence relatedness founded on exchange as an approach to understand relations across the extended family, which importantly involves additional help, financial resources, and intimacy. I underscore how men selectively seek intimacy in some family relations, notably as fathers and grandfathers. Provision of additional help and seeking of intimacy lead to men’s (re)construction of masculinities differing across family relations, with an important reason for men to select their practices so as to craft their family relations is to address their sense of well-being. Further, the pattern of men’s family relations reveals the emergence of substantially novel sons-in-law relations, as compared to that found in ie patriarchal norms. This evidence suggests a fundamental shift from a vertically-dominated set of family relations, as in the ie household, to a more horizontal, fluid set of relations across the extended family.
42

The Influence of Father Involvement and Family Structure Variables on Young Adult-Father Relationship Quality

Tefteller, David Hjortaas 15 September 2014 (has links)
No description available.
43

Les relations d’attachement et d’activation père-enfant : effet modérateur de l’engagement paternel pour prédire le développement socio-affectif des enfants

Dumont, Caroline 12 1900 (has links)
Tout autant que la mère, le père est une figure d’attachement importante pour l’enfant. Toutefois le lien d’attachement père-enfant se formerait différemment du lien d’attachement mère-enfant. Les pères sont souvent plus engagés que les mères dans des activités ludiques, moins dans des activités de soins. Les jeux faits avec le père sont souvent plus physiques aussi, plus stimulants. En incitant son enfant au jeu de façon sensible, le père devient un tremplin pour l’exploration de son enfant et le développement de sa confiance en soi et en l’autre. C’est en tant que figure d’ouverture sur le monde que le père aurait une plus grande influence sur le développement de son enfant. C’est ce que nous apprennent les études sur l’engagement paternel. Jusqu’à maintenant peu d’auteurs ont étudié l’engagement des pères en même temps que l’attachement père-enfant, mais plusieurs proposent déjà que cette fonction d’ouverture sur le monde expliquerait la formation du lien père-enfant. La relation d’attachement père-enfant serait basée sur une relation d’activation. L’objectif de la présente thèse est précisément de mieux comprendre la nature du lien d’attachement père-enfant. Deux articles composent cette thèse. Le premier article est théorique et fait une recension de la littérature sur l’attachement père-enfant et l’engagement paternel. Le deuxième article est empirique et propose justement de vérifier l’influence de l’engagement paternel sur la formation du lien d’attachement au père. En tout 53 dyades pères-enfants ont participé à cette étude. L’engagement des pères au niveau du réconfort, de la stimulation et de la discipline a été évalué lorsque les enfants avaient entre 12 et 18 mois. À cet âge, la qualité d’attachement et de la relation d’activation ont aussi été évaluées, respectivement avec la Situation étrangère et la Situation risquée. Les deux mises en situation ont ensuite été comparées pour voir laquelle prédit mieux le développement des enfants à l’âge préscolaire, au niveau des compétences sociales, des problèmes intériorisés et des problèmes extériorisés. Les résultats obtenus indiquent que la Situation risquée prédit mieux le développement socio-affectif des enfants (compétences sociales et problèmes intériorisés). Aucun lien n’a été trouvé avec la Situation étrangère, même en tenant compte de l’engagement du père au niveau du réconfort. Ces résultats valident la théorie de la relation d’activation et l’importance de la fonction paternelle d’ouverture sur le monde. Les limites de la présente étude, ainsi que ses implications théoriques et méthodologiques, seront abordées dans la discussion du deuxième article et en conclusion de la présente thèse. / Like mothers, fathers are important attachment figure for children. However, the mechanism behind father-child attachment appears to be different and unique. Compared to mothers, fathers engaged in more playful activities with their children, less in nursing activities. The games they do together are also more physical and more exciting. By encouraging his child to explore in a sensitive way, a father becomes a catalyst for risk-taking, helping his child to become confident in himself and in others. That function of opening children to the outside world would have an important impact on children’s socioemotional development. That is what we have learned from studies on father involvement. Until now, very few researchers have studied father involvement and father-child attachment at the same time, but many of them are already suggesting that it is by opening up children to the outside world that fathers become important attachment figure for them. Father-child attachment would build on the quality of their activation relationship. The present thesis aimed precisely at improving our understanding of father-child attachment. Two articles are included. The first article is a theoretical one. It is review of what has been written up to now on father-child attachment and on father involvement. The second article is empirical. It is specifically about evaluating the influence of fathering on the mechanism behind father-child attachment. A total of 53 father-child dyads were included in the present study. Father involvement in comfort, stimulation and discipline was measured when children where between 12 and 18 months old. At this age, attachment and activation quality was also measured, respectively with the Strange Situation and the Risky Situation. The two procedures where then compared to see which one was better able to predict children level of social competency, internalizing problems and externalizing problems during preschool years. Results indicates that the Risky Situation is a better predictor of children’s socio-emotional development (social competency and internalizing problems). No relationship was found with the Strange Situation, even when considering father involvement in comfort. Those results support the activation relationship theory and the importance of openness to the outside world for fathers. This study limitations, as well as it’s theoretical and methodological implications will be explained in the discussion of the second article and in the conclusion of the present thesis.
44

Les relations d’attachement et d’activation père-enfant : effet modérateur de l’engagement paternel pour prédire le développement socio-affectif des enfants

Dumont, Caroline 12 1900 (has links)
Tout autant que la mère, le père est une figure d’attachement importante pour l’enfant. Toutefois le lien d’attachement père-enfant se formerait différemment du lien d’attachement mère-enfant. Les pères sont souvent plus engagés que les mères dans des activités ludiques, moins dans des activités de soins. Les jeux faits avec le père sont souvent plus physiques aussi, plus stimulants. En incitant son enfant au jeu de façon sensible, le père devient un tremplin pour l’exploration de son enfant et le développement de sa confiance en soi et en l’autre. C’est en tant que figure d’ouverture sur le monde que le père aurait une plus grande influence sur le développement de son enfant. C’est ce que nous apprennent les études sur l’engagement paternel. Jusqu’à maintenant peu d’auteurs ont étudié l’engagement des pères en même temps que l’attachement père-enfant, mais plusieurs proposent déjà que cette fonction d’ouverture sur le monde expliquerait la formation du lien père-enfant. La relation d’attachement père-enfant serait basée sur une relation d’activation. L’objectif de la présente thèse est précisément de mieux comprendre la nature du lien d’attachement père-enfant. Deux articles composent cette thèse. Le premier article est théorique et fait une recension de la littérature sur l’attachement père-enfant et l’engagement paternel. Le deuxième article est empirique et propose justement de vérifier l’influence de l’engagement paternel sur la formation du lien d’attachement au père. En tout 53 dyades pères-enfants ont participé à cette étude. L’engagement des pères au niveau du réconfort, de la stimulation et de la discipline a été évalué lorsque les enfants avaient entre 12 et 18 mois. À cet âge, la qualité d’attachement et de la relation d’activation ont aussi été évaluées, respectivement avec la Situation étrangère et la Situation risquée. Les deux mises en situation ont ensuite été comparées pour voir laquelle prédit mieux le développement des enfants à l’âge préscolaire, au niveau des compétences sociales, des problèmes intériorisés et des problèmes extériorisés. Les résultats obtenus indiquent que la Situation risquée prédit mieux le développement socio-affectif des enfants (compétences sociales et problèmes intériorisés). Aucun lien n’a été trouvé avec la Situation étrangère, même en tenant compte de l’engagement du père au niveau du réconfort. Ces résultats valident la théorie de la relation d’activation et l’importance de la fonction paternelle d’ouverture sur le monde. Les limites de la présente étude, ainsi que ses implications théoriques et méthodologiques, seront abordées dans la discussion du deuxième article et en conclusion de la présente thèse. / Like mothers, fathers are important attachment figure for children. However, the mechanism behind father-child attachment appears to be different and unique. Compared to mothers, fathers engaged in more playful activities with their children, less in nursing activities. The games they do together are also more physical and more exciting. By encouraging his child to explore in a sensitive way, a father becomes a catalyst for risk-taking, helping his child to become confident in himself and in others. That function of opening children to the outside world would have an important impact on children’s socioemotional development. That is what we have learned from studies on father involvement. Until now, very few researchers have studied father involvement and father-child attachment at the same time, but many of them are already suggesting that it is by opening up children to the outside world that fathers become important attachment figure for them. Father-child attachment would build on the quality of their activation relationship. The present thesis aimed precisely at improving our understanding of father-child attachment. Two articles are included. The first article is a theoretical one. It is review of what has been written up to now on father-child attachment and on father involvement. The second article is empirical. It is specifically about evaluating the influence of fathering on the mechanism behind father-child attachment. A total of 53 father-child dyads were included in the present study. Father involvement in comfort, stimulation and discipline was measured when children where between 12 and 18 months old. At this age, attachment and activation quality was also measured, respectively with the Strange Situation and the Risky Situation. The two procedures where then compared to see which one was better able to predict children level of social competency, internalizing problems and externalizing problems during preschool years. Results indicates that the Risky Situation is a better predictor of children’s socio-emotional development (social competency and internalizing problems). No relationship was found with the Strange Situation, even when considering father involvement in comfort. Those results support the activation relationship theory and the importance of openness to the outside world for fathers. This study limitations, as well as it’s theoretical and methodological implications will be explained in the discussion of the second article and in the conclusion of the present thesis.
45

Vaterschaft

Possinger, Johanna 30 May 2018 (has links)
In der Familiensoziologie wird davon ausgegangen, dass sich Vaterschaft dann konstituiert, wenn Männer dauerhaft und generationsübergreifend Sorgearbeit für Kinder leisten. Begrifflich kann unterschieden werden zwischen den Einstellungen zur Institution Vaterschaft (fatherhood) und der sozialen Praxis von Vätern im Familienalltag (fathering). Beide Dimensionen von Vaterschaft unterliegen einem gesellschaftlichen Wandel, der sich im Kontext von Veränderungen der Geschlechterverhältnisse vollzieht.
46

Precarious employment and fathering practices among African men

Malinga, Mandisa Vallentia 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis explored the fathering practices of precariously employed African men with the study objectives including understanding: (1) how precariously employed men construct fatherhood; (2) the fathering practices considered important to them; (3) in what way precarious employment impacts on their fathering practices; and (4) how precariously employed men negotiate between their children’s economic as well as socio-emotional needs. This research focused particularly on the experiences of roadside work-seekers in Parow, Cape Town, seeking to understand how they construct fatherhood within their precarious working conditions. What these men think about fatherhood is important particularly in South Africa where not only unemployment is high, but also the rates of children growing up without their fathers. An ethnographic study was conducted during which data was collected using both participant observation and semi-structured interview methods. This thesis reports on interviews conducted with 46 men over a period of seventeen weeks. The findings reveal that the majority of roadside work-seekers are migrants (both internal and cross border) who have families to provide for. This study also revealed having children as one of the main reasons men engage in precarious work activities. Also highlighted is the extent to which precarious work impact the lives of those involved to the extent that it affects their relationships with their children, families and intimate partners. The majority of day labourers, due to being unemployed also do not live with their children, with many being denied access as a result of a breakdown in their relationship with the mother of the child, but also as a result of being unable to fulfil certain traditional requirements expected of men who impregnate women out of wedlock in some African cultures. Finally, this study confirmed the various ways in which men engaged in precarious employment are exposed to high levels of poverty, homelessness, substance abuse, violence and crime, and racism, discrimination and exploitation. / Psychology / D. Phil. (Psychology)
47

Precarious employment and fathering practices among African men

Malinga, Mandisa Vallentia 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis explored the fathering practices of precariously employed African men with the study objectives including understanding: (1) how precariously employed men construct fatherhood; (2) the fathering practices considered important to them; (3) in what way precarious employment impacts on their fathering practices; and (4) how precariously employed men negotiate between their children’s economic as well as socio-emotional needs. This research focused particularly on the experiences of roadside work-seekers in Parow, Cape Town, seeking to understand how they construct fatherhood within their precarious working conditions. What these men think about fatherhood is important particularly in South Africa where not only unemployment is high, but also the rates of children growing up without their fathers. An ethnographic study was conducted during which data was collected using both participant observation and semi-structured interview methods. This thesis reports on interviews conducted with 46 men over a period of seventeen weeks. The findings reveal that the majority of roadside work-seekers are migrants (both internal and cross border) who have families to provide for. This study also revealed having children as one of the main reasons men engage in precarious work activities. Also highlighted is the extent to which precarious work impact the lives of those involved to the extent that it affects their relationships with their children, families and intimate partners. The majority of day labourers, due to being unemployed also do not live with their children, with many being denied access as a result of a breakdown in their relationship with the mother of the child, but also as a result of being unable to fulfil certain traditional requirements expected of men who impregnate women out of wedlock in some African cultures. Finally, this study confirmed the various ways in which men engaged in precarious employment are exposed to high levels of poverty, homelessness, substance abuse, violence and crime, and racism, discrimination and exploitation. / Psychology / D. Phil. (Psychology)

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