The interdependency of ?production“ and ?reproduction“ has increasingly attracted the attention of the scientific community and the media. Biological and social reproductions are topics of family and gender studies: In family research reproduction is analysed as a basic function of the family; in gender research reproduction is mainly studied as a factor that effects social inequality. While sociological research was for a long-time concentrated on the ?conciliation“ of ?work“ and ?(family) life“, nowadays a change of perspective is necessary: How can employees maintain their psychological and physical strength when the work sphere becomes more and more flexible? How can they safeguard their social relationships? The article connects the categories ?work-strength –life-strength “ as a perspective that considers the structural and contradictory relationship of ?work“ and ?life“. With the concept of ?doing reproduction“, individual efforts are brought in the centre of research. Hereby is shown that the functionality of reproduction as a social sphere is fundamentally based on reproduction as an individual practice. 相似文献
Research examining the relationship between internalizing symptoms and antisocial behaviors has generally been cross-sectional
in design. Thus, although extant data have substantiated a strong correlation between internalizing symptoms and antisocial
behaviors, few studies have focused on describing the nature of the co-occurrence over time. This study examined the relation
between growth in internalizing symptoms and longitudinal patterns of antisocial behavior in a sample of 283 inner-city males
and their caregivers assessed as part of a longitudinal developmental risk study. Participants were assessed annually in four
waves. Non-offenders and escalating offenders had lower levels of internalizing problems at wave 1 than did chronic minor
and serious-chronic-violent offenders. Results revealed a developmental trend of decreasing internalizing problems across
study years for most participants, as would be expected, with adolescents participating in serious, chronic, and violent patterns
of antisocial behavior displaying greater internalizing problems than those participating in stable patterns of less serious
or no antisocial behavior. Further, when there was escalation of seriousness and frequency of antisocial behavior, there also
was increased internalizing problems relative to non-escalating juveniles. Results are discussed in the context of developmental
psychopathology.
Community, demographic, familial, and personal risk factors of childhood depressive symptoms were examined from an ecological
theoretical approach using hierarchical linear modeling. Individual-level data were collected from an ethnically diverse (73%
African-American) community sample of 197 children and their parents; community-level data were obtained from the U.S. Census
regarding rates of community poverty and unemployment in participants’ neighborhoods. Results indicated that high rates of
community poverty and unemployment, children’s depressive attributional style, and low levels of self-perceived competence
predict children’s depressive symptoms, even after accounting for demographic and familial risk factors, such as parental
education and negative parenting behaviors. The effect of negative parenting behaviors on depressive symptoms was partially
mediated by personal variables like children’s self-perceived competence. Recommendations for future research, intervention
and prevention programs are discussed.
Danielle H. DallaireEmail:
Dr. Danielle H. Dallaire
is an Assistant Professor in the Psychology Department at The College of William and Mary. She received her Ph.D. from Temple
University in 2003. Her major research interests include children’s social and emotional development and promoting resiliency
in children and families in high risk environments, particularly children and families dealing with parental incarceration.
Dr. David A. Cole
is a Professor in the Department of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University. He received his Ph.D. from
The University of Houston in 1983. His major research interests center around developmental psychopathology in general and
childhood depression in particular.
Dr. Thomas M. Smith
is an Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Education at Vanderbilt University, Peabody College. He received his Ph.D.
in 2000 from The Pennsylvania State University. Professor Smith’s current research agenda focuses on the organization of teaching
quality, exploring relationships between educational policy (national, state, district, and school level), school organization,
teacher commitment, and the quality of classroom instruction.
Dr. Jeffrey A. Ciesla
is an Assistant Professor in the Psychology Department at Kent State University. He received his Ph.D. from The State University
of New York at Buffalo in 2004. His major research interests include the effects of ruminative thought and stressful life
events on depressive disorders.
Beth LaGrange,
M.S., is a Doctoral candidate in Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University.
Her current research interests include depression and the development of depressive cognitive style in children and adolescents.
Dr. Farrah M. Jacquez
is a Postdoctoral fellow in pediatric psychology at the Mailman Center for Child Development at the University of Miami.
She received her Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University in 2006. Her major research interests include parenting in the context of
poverty and developing community-based interventions for underserved children and families.
Ashley Q. Pineda,
M.S., is a Doctoral candidate in Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University
and is currently completing her internship at the Children’s Hospital at Stanford University. Her major research interests
include examining the reciprocal relations between parenting behaviors, depressive cognitions, and childhood depression.
Alanna E. Truss,
M.S., is a Doctoral candidate in the Department of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University. Her major research
and clinical interests include developmental factors in internalizing disorders in children and adolescents and the effects
of trauma on children and families.
Amy S. Folmer
is a graduate student in the Department of Psychology and Human Development at Vanderbilt University. She received her B.A.
from The University of Texas in 2003. Her major research interests include cognitive developmental factors that influence
the applicability of adult cognitive models of depression to children. 相似文献
Many studies have documented the ways in which shyness can be a barrier to personal well-being and social adjustment throughout
childhood and adolescence; however, less is known regarding shyness in emerging adulthood. Shyness as experienced during emerging
adulthood may continue to be a risk factor for successful development. The purpose of this study was to compare shy emerging
adults with their non-shy peers in (a) internalizing behaviors, (b) externalizing behaviors, and (c) close relationships.
Participants included 813 undergraduate students (500 women, 313 men) from a number of locations across the United States.
Results showed that relatively shy emerging adults, both men and women, had more internalizing problems (e.g., anxious, depressed,
low self-perceptions in multiple domains), engaged in fewer externalizing behaviors (e.g., less frequent drinking), and experienced
poorer relationship quality with parents, best friends, and romantic partners than did their non-shy peers.
Larry J. NelsonEmail:
Larry J. Nelson
is an Associate Professor in the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University. He received his Ph.D. in 2000 from the
University of Maryland, College Park. His major research interests are in social and self development during early childhood
and emerging adulthood.
Laura M. Padilla-Walker
is an Assistant Professor in the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University. She received her Ph.D. in 2005 from the
University of Nebraska—Lincoln. Her major research interests center on the parent-adolescent relationship as it relates to
adolescents’ moral and prosocial behaviors and internalization of values.
Sarah Badger
received her Ph.D. in 2005 from Brigham Young University. Her major research interests are marriage formation and development
as well as emerging adulthood and marriage readiness.
Carolyn McNamara Barry
is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Loyola College in Maryland. She received her Ph.D. in 2001 from the University
of Maryland, College Park. Her major research interests are in social and self development during adolescence and emerging
adulthood.
Jason S. Carroll
is an Associate Professor in the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University. He received his Ph.D. in 2001 from the
University of Minnesota. His major research interests are in marriage formation and development as well as emerging adulthood
and marriage readiness.
Stephanie D. Madsen
is an Associate Professor of Psychology at McDaniel College. She received her Ph.D. in 2001 from the Institute of Child Development,
University of Minnesota. She is particularly interested in how relationships with significant others impact child and adolescent
development. 相似文献
The purpose of this study was to gain a clearer understanding of the relation between parents’ knowledge of their emerging-adult
children and emerging adults’ risk behaviors. Participants included 200 undergraduate students between the ages of 18 and
25 (121 women, 78 men; Mage = 19.59, SD = 1.62) and both of their parents. Results revealed that knowledge of the emerging-adult child’s activities varied as a function
of parent- and child-reports, and that child outcomes associated with parental knowledge were generally positive, including
less drinking, drug use, and risky sexual behavior (although this varied as a function of reporter). The links between maternal
knowledge and lower drug and alcohol use were particularly strong in the presence of maternal closeness. Implications for
understanding the parent–child relationship during the transition to adulthood were discussed.
Being a victim of sexual aggression from a peer is a common experience among adolescents and poses a significant risk for
various forms of psychopathology. Unfortunately, little is known concerning specific interpersonal factors that increase an
adolescent’s risk for experiencing sexual aggression. The current study assessed the contribution made by several interpersonal
factors both for the first and repeated experience of becoming a victim of sexual aggression from a peer. Data were collected
annually from a longitudinal sample of 200 adolescents over a period of 4 years and were analyzed using multiple-spell, discrete-time
survival analysis. Approximately 46% of the adolescents reported experiencing some form of sexual aggression by the end of
wave 4. Further, 65% of victims reported experiencing a repeat incident of aggression. Females were at higher risk both for
initial and repeated victimization, as were adolescents with more sexual experience and higher levels of rejection sensitivity.
Results are discussed in terms of implications for future prevention efforts.
This study examined dimensions of mothers’ and fathers’ involvement in adolescents’ romantic relationships when offspring
were age 17. Using cluster analysis, parents from 105 White, working and middle class families were classified as positively
involved, negatively involved, or autonomy-oriented with respect to their adolescents’ romantic relationships. Patterns of
parental involvement were generally not associated with parent–offspring relationship quality at about adolescent age 13,
but earlier parent–offspring relationship quality moderated the associations between parental involvement and adolescent romantic
experiences at about age 18. Positive parent–offspring relationship quality buffered the effects of negative parental involvement,
whereas poorer parent–offspring relationship quality was a more adaptive context for adolescents of autonomy-oriented parents.
Discussion focuses on the importance of parenting practices in adolescent romantic relationships and the emotional climate
of parent–offspring relationships as a developmental context for those practices.
In 2005 Indonesian and European institutes joined to start the first step for the implementation of an Ocean Operational System
in the Indonesian archipelago. The system will support the decision making process for the sustainable use of marine resources,
providing useful information and added value products as well as a service for an improved management of the sea with high
business impact to targeted groups as public authorities and commercial operators (coastal managers, fishermen, shipping companies).
In this paper the System is shortly described with its potential benefits and economic and social impacts.