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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.
11

Back to the future, for better or worse? Meanings of marriage for young women in the Lower Hunter Region, Australia

Kirby, Emma January 2009 (has links)
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Why do young women still choose to marry in the new millennium? Although conjugal diversity in Australia has increased and crude marriage rates have decreased, the majority of young women still desire marriage. Marriage clearly remains important. The institution of marriage, despite high divorce rates, continues to exist as the most powerful and widely acknowledged form of social contract. Few empirical studies have focused on the meanings young women ascribe to marriage. Rather, marriage tends to be regarded as a stable concept around which to research and investigate. The meanings and definitions of marriage, particularly how young people identify marriage within their wider identity, has been ignored in much of the literature. This acceptance of marriage and its meaning within existing literature universalises and reinforces marriage as a dominant social and societal norm, whereby prestige is attached across cultures and through time. Marriage has sustained its centrality within social science research, yet without justification or adequate problematising. Meanwhile, in gender studies there is a tendency to assume that marriage is an outdated concept which has been superseded by the sexual revolution and by second wave feminism. As a result, feminist studies have not addressed the apparent persistence of marriage as a goal for young women. This thesis project contributes to filling that identified gap by addressing the apparent persistence of marriage as a goal for young women in Australia. This mixed methods study maintains a focus on qualitative methodologies and feminist epistemologies, aiming to provide rich subjective accounts of marriage. The study comprises data from 225 surveys. It also includes data from in-depth semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions with 75 of the survey participants. All three kinds of data collection asked about the meanings of marriage for young women. The participants were women aged 18 to 35 years, of various relationship statuses, from the Newcastle and Lower Hunter region of New South Wales, Australia. Participants were purposefully sampled to allow a spread of age and relationship status. Although this was not specifically intended, as a cohort they can be described as predominantly white and middle class. A grounded theory approach in line with Glaser and Strauss (1967) was employed to uncover subjective narratives that revealed attitudes and feelings towards the place of marriage and intimate relationships in the young women’s life trajectories. The findings of this study result from descriptive statistical analysis of survey data, and from content and discourse analysis of interviews and focus groups that indicate participants’ discursive constructions of marriage. The study finds that participants position marriage as a marker of status, as important for child bearing, as well as the major factor in achieving a competent and legitimate mature feminine identity. This study presents an overview of young Australian women’s aspirations for, and experiences of marriage and intimate relationships. It offers fresh insights into the ways these women imagine marriage and the marital relationship within their life trajectory. An integrated account of feminist critiques of marriage, and theorising on individualization and detraditionalization, allows us to see how gender inequalities are maintained in marital relationships under the discourse of individualization. This study offers evidence that emphasises the need for continuing feminist critiques of marriage and the family. The findings of this study suggest that the neo-liberal discourse of individualization has encouraged of the idea of gender neutrality, equality and autonomy within the marital relationship. At the same time the young women indicate that they expect to put the interests and wishes of a future husband ahead of their own. High levels of personal compromise are foreshadowed. Yet their imagined futures include more than marriage. They do wish for self-fulfilment and many want careers. However, marriage is constructed as the anchoring status and identity that makes those goals legitimate and achievable. The study finds evidence of both detraditionalization and retraditionalization trends in the aspirations, expectations and lived realities of the young women interviewed. It is argued that attitudes towards marriage reflect the detraditionalization process to some extent, yet concurrently indicate the retraditionalization process; for example in the desire for full church weddings and in the defence of women taking responsibility for housework and raising children.
12

'Ourselves alone'? the work of single women in South Australia, 1911-1961 : the institutions which they shaped and which shaped them /

Keane, Mary Veronica. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, Discipline of Gender and Labour Studies, 2005. / "May 2005" Includes bibliographical references. Also available in a print form.
13

Sebben che siamo donne (although we are women) : a comparative study of Italian immigrant women in post-war Canada and Australia

Iuliano, Susanna January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
14

Sexually transmitted debt : credibility, culpability and the burden of responsibility

Harper, Ainsley J. (Ainsley Jane) January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 230-248. This thesis examines the causes and consequences to women who, as a result of their marital of de facto relationship incur debt from their spouse/partner. First, it aims to describe the legal and social construction of sexually transmitted debt through a feminist analysis of the 1998 Australian High Court legal case of Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd. It aims, second, to contribute to feminist understanding of financial decision-making within households by focussing on those decisions that lead to the accumulation of debt within the domestic sphere.
15

Evaluation of a smoking cessation intervention for pregnant women and their partners attending a public hospital antenatal clinic / Melanie Wakefield.

Wakefield, Melanie, University of Adelaide. Dept. of Community Medicine January 1994 (has links)
Includes examples of information booklets as appendices / Includes bibliographical references: p. 232-251 / xiv, 251 p. : photo. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Community Medicine, 1994
16

Sexually transmitted debt : credibility, culpability and the burden of responsibility / Ainsley J. Harper.

Harper, Ainsley J. (Ainsley Jane) January 2001 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 230-248. / v, 248 leaves ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / This thesis examines the causes and consequences to women who, as a result of their marital of de facto relationship incur debt from their spouse/partner. First, it aims to describe the legal and social construction of sexually transmitted debt through a feminist analysis of the 1998 Australian High Court legal case of Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd. It aims, second, to contribute to feminist understanding of financial decision-making within households by focussing on those decisions that lead to the accumulation of debt within the domestic sphere. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Social Inquiry, 2001
17

Evaluation of a smoking cessation intervention for pregnant women and their partners attending a public hospital antenatal clinic

Wakefield, Melanie. January 1994 (has links) (PDF)
Includes examples of information booklets as appendices Includes bibliographical references: p. 232-251
18

Perception : a contributing factor in the different career advancement outcomes of female managers

Wood, Glenice January 2001 (has links)
Abstract not available
19

Gentlewomen in the bush : a historical interpretation of British women's personal narratives in nineteenth-century rural Australia

Dömötör, Ildikó January 2004 (has links)
Abstract not available
20

"Sex on the Hustings" : labor and the construction of 'the woman voter' in two federal elections (1983, 1993)

Huntley, Rebecca. January 2003 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 286-306.

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