Spelling suggestions: "subject:"spouses"" "subject:"spouse""
1 |
A social worker's reflection on handling infidelity issues with violent couples /Wong, Hoi-woon, Amy. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2004.
|
2 |
Experiences of spousal support during the transition to parenthood: the organization of paid and family workLemire, Shannon Unknown Date
No description available.
|
3 |
Experiences of spousal support during the transition to parenthood: the organization of paid and family workLemire, Shannon 06 1900 (has links)
This critical ethnographic study explores couples experiences of spousal support during the transition to first-time parenthood and the organization of paid and family work. How first-time parents manage paid and family work is central to the experience of support and critical to an ongoing nurturing relationship. Seven couples were selected from the principal study, Mobilizing Intergenerational Social Support during the Transition to Parenthood, and were interviewed prior to the birth and again when infants were nine months to one year of age. On the whole, first-time parents reported positive support experiences with their spouses. Nonsupport occurred most often when parents were required to manage the interface between family work and paid or student work. The exchange of support between first-time parents may be strengthened by offering flexible work options and enhanced access to and provisions in parental leave policies. Prenatal education highlighting the common concerns of first-time parents may further strengthen support.
|
4 |
A sympathetic lady /Leshay, Ilana D. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Undergraduate honors paper--Mount Holyoke College, 2008. Dept. of Art. / CD-Rom includes images of art exhibit. Includes bibliographical references (leaf [12])
|
5 |
The evaluation of a Florida certified batterer intervention programHerman, Katharine Grace. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of West Florida, 2008. / Title from title page of source document. Document formatted into pages; contains 62 pages. Includes bibliographical references.
|
6 |
A social worker's reflection on handling infidelity issues with violent couplesWong, Hoi-woon, Amy. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2004. / Also available in print.
|
7 |
"You can freak out or deal with it" : military wives' perspectives on communication and family resilience, coping, and support during deploymentRossetto, Kelly Renee 22 October 2009 (has links)
This study investigates the process of resilience from the perspective of military wives
during deployment. The study had two main goals: 1) to further understand the
deployment experience, as it is lived personally and within the family, and 2) to develop
a theory-based resilience model, guided by family stress and resilience theory,
highlighting the role of communication within the family resilience process. According to
the FAAR Model (Patterson, 1988; 2002), resilience involves three components:
meanings, demands, and capabilities. Based on the goals of the study and the three main
components of resilience, five broad research questions guided the study: How do
military spouses perceive, interpret, and make meaning of their experience with spousal
deployment? How do spouses cope with the spousal deployment experience? How do
spouses perceive the family deployment and coping experience? What supportive resources and responses are most helpful for military spouses during spousal deployment,
and why? And what supportive resources and responses are most unhelpful for military
spouses during spousal deployment, and why? The data are also viewed through a lens of
ambiguous loss theory (Boss, 1999; 2004; 2006; 2007), as deployment is a stressful
situation that incorporates uncertainty, loss, and a presence-absence paradox for spouses
and families. To investigate these questions and develop these theories, in-depth
interviews were conducted with 26 military wives who were currently experiencing
deployment. The results illustrate various aspects of women’s perceptions of their
deployment experiences, including how they make sense of these experiences. Women
did not only discuss their own personal experiences; they also reported experiences at
relational and family levels. Paralleling these tri-level perceptions of the experience,
women’s approaches to coping also occurred at individual, relational, and family levels.
Different coping strategies within each level are outlined and discussed. Finally,
women’s perceptions and evaluations of the responses they receive from others, both
supportive and unsupportive, are reported and discussed. Based on the results, a
transactional model of family resilience, highlighting the central role of communication,
is proposed. Implications for theory (e.g., stress and resilience theories, ambiguous loss
theory) and practice are discussed. Future directions for research are explored. / text
|
8 |
Spousal sexual assault in Canada and Nigeria: a substantive equality approachIbrahim, Falilat Mobolaji 22 August 2016 (has links)
This study examines spousal sexual assault laws in Nigeria and Canada through the lens of substantive equality. The aim is to show that only when a substantive-equality approach is used for legislation and adjudication of spousal sexual assault can victims fairly seek and realize justice. This is because substantive equality considers broader socio-economic and cultural contexts that support this crime, including exposing stereotypes that underpin its legislation and adjudication. The study shows that in Nigeria and Canada spousal sexual assault is endemic and that women are disproportionately represented as victims and men as perpetrators. Failures to apply the principles of substantive equality in adjudicating spousal sexual assault lead to the flaws in evidentiary procedures involving this crime. The study concludes that it is important to revise criminal laws and evidentiary procedures in Nigeria and Canada using substantive equality principles. / October 2016
|
9 |
Institutional batterer's intervention program within the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction /Swogger, Roxanne M. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Youngstown State University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 70-73). Also available via the World Wide Web in PDF format.
|
10 |
Spousal Support and Diabetes Management: the Role of Gender and ReligionEstevez, Rosemary 08 1900 (has links)
One in four adults over the age of 60 suffers from diabetes. Around 85%-90% of individuals who have diabetes suffer from Type II diabetes. The prevalence of individuals with diabetes is expected to increase. This paper addresses the influence spousal support, friend support, and religion all have on diabetes mellitus. Gender difference in relation to spousal support benefits has also received limited attention. The limited amount of studies that have examined gender differences in relation to spousal support and diabetes management indicate that diabetic men benefit the most from spousal support due to their wives active involvement in meal preparation and grocery shopping. The results showed that neither spousal support nor religious salience was significantly related to diabetes management. There were observed gender differences in religious salience (males = 4.84, females = 5.36, p < .001) and positive spousal support (males = 3.19, females = 3.02, p <.001), but none of the major hypotheses were supported.
|
Page generated in 0.0529 seconds