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Grandmotherhood in Ukraine: Behavioral Variation and Evolutionary ImplicationsShreyer, Sofiya 18 December 2020 (has links)
Grandmothers are known to increase the health and well-being of their grandchildren in many different populations. However, grandmothers may vary in their contributions based on their relatedness to their grandchildren. In some populations, maternal grandmothers decrease the risk of mortality and increase the health of their grandchildren more than paternal grandmothers. Grandmaternal influence also sometimes varies based on the gender of the grandchild. The behavioral mechanisms of grandmaternal investment are not well understood and have not been explored in the heavily intergenerational context of Eastern Europe. This study examines the behavioral variation of sixty-two Ukrainian grandmothers through interviews and a semi-structured questionnaire. I test whether maternal and paternal grandmothers differ in face-to-face contact with their grandchildren and whether the gender of the grandchild influences the frequency of face-to-face contact. Additionally, I examine qualitative responses from grandmothers on various aspects of childcare to determine whether maternal and paternal grandmothers have different childcare strategies and experience grandmotherhood in different ways. I found that maternal grandmothers have significantly more face-to-face time with their grandchildren (173.8 days out of the year as compared to 87.5 for paternal grandmothers, p
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Chronic Conditions, Depressive Symptoms, and Self-Rated Health in GrandmothersHenrich, Christina M. 23 May 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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PERINATAL WELLBEING IN AN ABORIGINAL CONTEXT: UNDERSTANDING THE HEALTH BELIEFS AND CULTURAL PERCEPTIONS OF GRANDMOTHERS FROM THE SIX NATIONS RESERVE IN SOUTHERN ONTARIOKANDASAMY, SUJANE 11 1900 (has links)
Background: Aboriginal peoples face disproportionate health inequalities in comparison to non-Aboriginal Canadians, especially in regards to cardiovascular disease risk factors. Evidence illustrates that the propensity to develop these chronic diseases happens during the perinatal period. Related to this are maternal health behaviours—which are influenced by grandmothers’ advice. Very few studies have explored Aboriginal grandmothers’ beliefs around perinatal health or how they translate into maternal health behaviours.
Objectives: The objectives of this thesis were to:
1) Qualitatively explore the beliefs and cultural perceptions around prenatal and postnatal health behaviours from the accounts of Grandmothers from the Six Nations reserve;
2) Incorporate the emergent themes to develop a theoretical framework;
3) Design and apply culturally-respectful avenues for knowledge translation.
Methods: Qualitative, semi-structured individual interviews and focus groups were conducted with grandmothers from the Six Nations reserve. Sampling of participants used non-probabilistic methods. Recruitment was achieved through the leadership of community members and continued until saturation. All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and underwent thematic analysis. A Six Nations community member was involved with the coding process and additional interviews were conducted to ensure member-checking.
Results: Six Nations grandmothers identified three primary perinatal beliefs: 1) Pregnancy is a natural phase of the life course that is not an illness nor a “comfort zone”; 2) Pregnancy is a sacred period where balance is key; 3) Optimal perinatal health is achieved through immunity, security, comfort, social development, and parental responsibility. This knowledge is shared via storytelling and observational teaching. In addition, the grandmothers identified local community responsibilities required to uphold optimal health. Consultation with the community resulted in an integrated knowledge translation component (short film) for key stakeholders.
Conclusion: Building resilience and strength through culturally-generated interventions will guide the future of community-based programs and policies that aim to reduce cardiometabolic risk factors in this Aboriginal community. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Role Reward of Grandmothers Caring for GrandchildrenPhisaiphanth, Suparat 21 February 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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The impact of living with Zulu pensioner grandmothers as household heads on the gender construction and sexuality of their teenage granddaughters.Mangalparsad, Roshilla Sharitha. January 2007 (has links)
African pensioner grandmothers and their teenage granddaughters constitute a vulnerable sector in our communities. Despite financial constraints these grandmothers struggle against great odds to provide a better life for their granddaughters. In such households, granddaughters are exposed to socialization strategies that are devised to cope with limitations. These strategies impact on the way they construct notions of gender and sexuality. Using qualitative research methodology to investigate the responses to interviews and questionnaires of a selected group of five female teenage learners and their grandmothers at a secondary school in Northdale, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, I discuss how these learners and their principal carers construct gender and sexuality. I make use of postmodern principles to analyse the impact of changing household patterns and coping strategies on these young women. I discuss the gendered division of labour, their 'perceived' notions about femininity and masculinity and bodies. I focus especially on how grandmothers use their own construction of gender and sexuality in influencing their granddaughters by what they say and also by what they do not say. In this investigation, I include Western theorizing and traditional African teachings about gender construction and sexuality. This study demonstrates that gender is not innate but fluid and that constructions of sexuality can create docile 'feminine' bodies. However, there are indications that these young women are resisting the constructs of their grandmothers to create new discourses of their own. Female agency is a mechanism that can be utilized to generate new subjectivities. / Thesis (M.A.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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Grandmothers becoming grandmothers againWeathersby, Bonnie Rentz 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The Expression of Emotional Warmth: Ethnotheories of Rural and Urban Indian Mothers and GrandmothersAbels, Monika 05 September 2007 (has links)
In this thesis ethnotheories on the expression of emotional warmth towards babies were studied, considering socio-economic and cultural factors. It was proposed that the more relatedness is emphasized as a socialization goal the more emphasis is also put on the expression of emotional warmth. Furthermore, the modality, in which emotional warmth is perceived to be ideally expressed, was expected to be related to the extent the participants want to foster autonomy. Autonomy-fostering caregivers were expected to stress distal modes of expressing emotional warmth more, than less autonomy-fostering caregivers. These two hypotheses were tested with mothers (and grandmothers) of three-month-old children from Germany, USA, urban and rural India. The hypotheses were predominantly confirmed, though some methodological issues are reasons for concern. The applicability of the (Western) psychological theories on the expression of emotional warmth towards infants perceived by Indian caregivers was explored. The Indian caregivers ethnotheories matched the psychological theories fairly well. However, other concepts were also mentioned frequently. Therefore open-ended methods were used to study the indigenous concept of the Evil Eye . Some rural Indian mothers considered looking at the baby while breastfeeding, or praising the baby as a potential danger. Finally, the different caregivers roles as perceived by urban Indian mothers and rural Indian mothers and grandmothers were explored. The mother was seen as the most important caregiver for the expression of warmth towards an infant, though rural and urban caregivers disagreed about the reasons for her being special. Other (unspecified) family members were mentioned frequently. Fathers were perceived in different roles by urban and rural mothers, though they agreed on them being providers of vocal or verbal stimulation for the child. The mothers regarded the grandmothers as a source of advice and support in child-rearing matters.
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The role of children in the Zulu folktaleDe Bruin, Annemarié 30 November 2002 (has links)
Chapter 1 introduces the study by means of its aim, scope, methodology and
terminology. It also hosts summaries of all the folktales that are analysed in this
study.
Chapter 2 is a study of parenthood and its portrayal in Zulu folktales.
Motherhood and fatherhood will be scrutinised separately.
Chapter 3 concentrates on girl characters as siblings, brides and companions to
old men.
Chapter 4 analyses boy characters as herd boys, villains, tricksters and
companions to old women.
Chapter 5 concentrates on the status of the Zulu folktale. The influence of
urbanisation, gender, and the media will receive attention. The lessons that
folktales teach will be noted.
Chapter 6 concludes and summarises this study and hosts recommendations
on the promotion of Zulu folktales / African Languages / M.A. (African Languages)
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Discursos de avós sobre o bebê, sua educação e cuidadoTorres, Maria Eduarda Abrantes 06 May 2013 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2013-05-06 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico / This study aims to describe and interpret general discourse of grandmothers on
babies education and care. It integrates the Center for Research on Gender,
Race and Age (NEGRI), of the Social Psychology Postgraduate Study Program
of the Pontifícia Universidade Católica of São Paulo, coordinated by Professor
Fúlvia Rosemberg, who has been studying the process of social construction of
childhood in Brazil. Inserted in the research group that investigates speeches by
contemporary social actors about the baby, its education and care, this
dissertation seeks to collaborate with the construction of a conception of care
and education for babies including the right to quality child care education for
children from 0-3 years old. For this purpose, we have questioned the
construction of the public policy agenda for the Brazilian contemporary
childhood, including the subordinate position proposed for early childhood
educational policies. We have adopted the theoretical contributions of Social
Studies of Childhood, which consider this stage a social and historical
construction and the child a social actor, that is, also a producer of culture; the
studies on the construction of social problems have allowed us to denaturalize
the idea that the social policy agenda would be a translation of the objective
social needs. The method adopted was depth hermeneutics (HP). We
interviewed four grandmothers with higher level of education, living in the city of
Recife and belonging to the middle class urban population, who have
grandchildren aged 0-3 years old. The interviews were transcribed and
analyzed using content analysis techniques based on Bardin and Rosemberg.
In general, we apprehended that the grandmothers have few concrete
experiences or current information about the daycare and public policies for the
baby, however, are aware of the lack of vacancies in daycare centers. Although,
in most cases, the interviewees stated that they had already thought about the
baby s right to a daycare center, they apparently do not understand it as a right
for all babies, including their own grandchildren, but only for those who need, for
people of disadvantaged social classes. We note that for the grandmothers
interviewed, the mother, in the private space of her own home, would be the
best option for baby care and education until it enters school. Grandmothers
would be the second best option, being a protagonist or just a supervisor of a
reliable nanny/maid, third most cited choice of education and care. The daycare
center appeared as a last resort for cases where mothers have to work and do
not have someone reliable to leave their children with / Esta pesquisa tem como objetivo geral descrever e interpretar discursos de
mulheres-avós sobre a educação e o cuidado de bebês. A investigação se
insere na linha de Pesquisa do NEGRI - Núcleo de Estudos de Gênero, Raça e
Idade da Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo PUC-SP, coordenado
pela professora doutora Fúlvia Rosemberg, que vem estudando o processo de
construção social da infância no Brasil. Inserida no grupo de pesquisas que
investiga discursos proferidos por atores sociais contemporâneos sobre o bebê,
sua educação e cuidado, esta dissertação busca colaborar com a construção
de uma concepção de cuidado e educação de bebês que inclui a creche de
qualidade como direito das crianças de 0-3 anos. Para tanto temos
problematizado a construção da agenda de políticas públicas para a infância
brasileira contemporânea, nomeadamente a posição subalterna destinada à
pequena infância nas políticas educacionais. Adotamos os aportes teóricos dos
Estudos Sociais da Infância, que consideram essa fase uma construção social
e histórica e a criança um ator social, isto é, também produtor de cultura; dos
estudos sobre a construção de problemas sociais, que têm permitido
desnaturalizar a concepção de que a agenda de políticas sociais seria tradução
de necessidades sociais objetivas. O método adotado foi hermenêutica de
profundidade (HP). Foram entrevistadas quatro mulheres-avós com nível
superior de escolaridade, residentes na cidade do Recife e pertencentes às
camadas médias urbanas da população, que possuem neto(a)(s) na faixa
etária de 0 a 3 anos de idade. As entrevistas foram transcritas e analisadas
utilizando técnicas de análise de conteúdo baseadas em Bardin e Rosemberg.
De uma maneira geral, apreendemos que as avós dispõem de poucas
experiências concretas ou informações atuais sobre a creche e as políticas
públicas para o bebê, entretanto, estão conscientes que faltam vagas nas
creches públicas. Apesar de, em sua maioria, as entrevistadas terem afirmado
que já haviam pensado sobre o direito do bebê à creche, aparentemente não o
compreendem como um direito para todos os bebês, inclusive seus próprios
netos, mas apenas para aqueles que necessitam, para pessoas de camadas
menos favorecidas. Destacamos que para as avós entrevistadas, a mãe, no
espaço privado de sua própria casa, seria a melhor opção de cuidado e
educação do bebê até o ingresso na escola. A avó seria a segunda melhor
opção, sendo protagonista ou apenas supervisora de uma babá/empregada
doméstica de confiança, terceira opção de educação e cuidado mais citada. A
creche apareceu como última alternativa, para os casos em que as mães
precisem trabalhar e não tenham alguém de confiança com quem deixar seus
filhos
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Urban First Nations grandmothers : health promotion roles in family and communityGinn, Carla S., University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Health Sciences January 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this participatory action research study was to gain an awareness of the meanings of health for urban First Nations grandmothers, and how they promote it in their families and communities. Active participation of 7 urban First Nations grandmothers in the research process involved 4 group and 1 individual interview. Meanings of health included maintaining balance in all areas of life; physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual. Control imposed through the residential schools resulted in secrets kept, yet the survival and resiliency of the grandmothers were identified as part of being healthy.
Personal health was linked with the health of their families and communities, and an awareness of living in two cultures vital in the intergenerational transmission of knowledge. Relationships with grandchildren were catalysts for change, and the grandmothers described working to “turn it around” throughout their challenges in health and life, as one strategy for health promotion. / ix, 146 leaves ; 29 cm
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