16,583 results on '"fatherhood"'
Search Results
2. Introducing dadness
- Author
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Blackwell, Ian
- Published
- 2024
3. Portraits of Fatherhood: Depictions of Fathers and Father–Child Relationships in Award-Winning Children's Literature.
- Author
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Cutler, Laura and Lewis, William
- Subjects
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FATHERHOOD in literature , *PICTURE books for children , *AMERICAN children's literature , *FATHER-child relationship in literature , *CALDECOTT Medal , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Building upon scholarship examining representations of gendered characters in Caldecott Medal-winning books, this contemporary content analysis offers a critical investigation of fatherhood portrayals in American children's literature. Guided by Critical Multicultural Analysis, this study explores the ways in which father characters are depicted in a sample of 38 award-winning children's picture books from 2001 to 2020. Despite evolving roles, responsibilities, and expectations of fathers in American society, findings of this study indicated that representations of fathers have remained relatively static over the last two decades of award-winning picture books. Results show fathers most often in the roles of nurturer, companion, and caregiver, although the actual behaviors they engage in are reflective of heteronormative gender-stereotypical parenting patterns. Additionally, most father characters are depicted as White and heterosexual. Results of this analysis present a limited view of fatherhood that further perpetuates the peripheral role father characters play in children's literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Celebrating 30 years of masculinities scholarship in the South African Journal of Psychology.
- Author
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Langa, Malose, Kane, Christopher, and Kabongo, Tshisuaka E
- Subjects
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DISCOURSE analysis , *SCHOLARLY method , *DECOLONIZATION , *GENDER , *FATHERHOOD , *MASCULINITY , *ESSENTIALISM (Philosophy) - Abstract
The study of masculinities, and its intersection with psychology, has been a significant area of inquiry in South Africa. This article examines the development of masculinities scholarship in South Africa by analysing articles published in the South African Journal of Psychology between 1994 and 2024. Of the 165 gender-related articles published in the South African Journal of Psychology during this time, 66 specifically focused on men and masculinities. Utilizing Foucauldian Discourse Analysis, these articles were examined to identify three prominent discourses: (1) gender, sexuality, and violence; (2) health and wellness; and (3) fatherhood. The findings of the analysis reveal a discernible shift in the discourses surrounding masculinities over the last three decades. Specifically, there is a movement away from essentialist constructions of masculinity, towards more positive and egalitarian perspectives of masculinities that are non-hegemonic, non-violent, and non-risktaking. The study's findings have significant implications for future research on masculinities in South Africa, particularly in the areas of decolonial African-centred masculinities studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Fatherhood and men's working hours in a part-time economy.
- Author
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Zwier, Dieuwke, Kalmijn, Matthijs, and Bol, Thijs
- Subjects
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FATHERHOOD , *WORKING hours , *PART-time employment , *EMPLOYMENT of mothers , *CHILDBIRTH , *LABOR supply - Abstract
How do fathers adjust their working hours after the birth of their first child? Though the impact of childbirth on women's employment is well-established, less is known about its effect on fathers. We investigate this question in the Netherlands (2006–2017), a country characterized by high prevalence of part-time work. We focus on two contexts that might shape the extent to which first-time fathers reduce their working hours after childbirth: the household and the organization. For this purpose, we use detailed longitudinal register data. The results reveal that men's employment displays a high degree of stability around childbirth: even in the Dutch "part-time economy," the vast majority of fathers remain full-time employed. We do find substantial heterogeneity in labor market responses after childbirth. Fathers earning relatively less than their partner pre-childbirth are more likely to scale down their working hours. The organizational gender composition is also associated with work hours reductions following childbirth. Although we find that fathers' employment is contingent on both the household and organizational context, the substantial stability in men's labor supply remains an obstacle to a more equal division of (un)paid labor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Fatherhood in the context of preterm birth: A narrative review of contemporary research evidence.
- Author
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Le Driant, Barbara and Hamon, Emeline
- Abstract
Long focused on maternal roles in infancy, research is now exploring fathers' contributions to child development. Current public policy emphasizes early prevention and intervention for child and parent well‐being, especially for at‐risk infants such as those born prematurely. A literature review was conducted following the approach of a narrative review, to examine fatherhood in the context of preterm birth, highlighting the stress and emotional vulnerability experienced by fathers of preterm infants. Promoting early paternal presence and involvement in infant care helps fathers cope with this emotionally challenging experience. Despite limited data on premature fatherhood, fathers are active partners in dyadic interactions and play a significant role in their infant's neonatal intensive care unit journey and family dynamics. The discussion underscores the importance of father‐focused interventions and the paternal contribution to child development, framed within the authors' proposed integrative and developmental model of the family triad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Bringing birth fathers to the forefront: A two‐decade scoping review of birth father experiences in adoption.
- Author
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Bolsby, Samantha, Breen, Kyle, and Wu, Haorui
- Abstract
In adoption, it is common to consider the adopted child, the adoptive parents, and the birth mother as part of the adoption galaxy. Yet, birth fathers are often missing elements in adoption‐focused research. This article aims to comprehensively understand the current knowledge regarding birth fathers' experiences in adoption. Adapting the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses approach, this review identified 100 peer‐reviewed articles published from 2000 to 2022 on birth fathers in adoption. This article used a mixed‐methods approach to analyze the landscape of the current research. Quantitative analysis confirmed that birth fathers in adoption are under‐researched worldwide. In the qualitative analysis, the following themes emerged regarding birth fathers: a lack of openness, negative stereotypes, gatekeeping, and emotional impacts. The findings demonstrate the importance of considering the wishes and support needs of birth fathers when their child is being placed for adoption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. "I am a father": Experiences of Fatherhood in Diaries of Fathers from the Warsaw Ghetto.
- Author
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Malka, Tehila Darmon
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DIARY (Literary form) ,FATHERHOOD ,HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 ,CHILD care ,WELL-being ,MOLECULAR force constants - Abstract
While there has been considerable research on women and motherhood during the Holocaust, scholars have paid less attention to fatherhood. This article explores the experiences of Jewish fathers in the Warsaw ghetto during the Holocaust and sheds light on the roles and challenges they encountered in the face of extreme adversity as documented in their diaries. Many fathers, who traditionally had not been involved in household chores and childcare before the war, found themselves taking on these responsibilities in the ghetto. Harsh conditions and constant threats forced fathers to adapt to and take on new roles, both physically and emotionally. These roles included providing for their families, as well as nurturing their children's well-being, both physically and psychologically. A close examination of the diaries of fathers in the Warsaw ghetto reveals their struggles to protect and care for their children amid an intimidating reality. The diaries convey a range of emotions, including fear, frustration, guilt, and love, and demonstrate the profound impact of their traumatic experiences on their sense of self. Fatherhood emerges as a dynamic construct shaped by circumstances, with extreme events requiring fathers to adapt and balance traditional roles with new challenges to protect their families. These diaries provide a unique perspective on how fatherhood was redefined and tested in the collapsing Warsaw ghetto. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Nonresident fathers' seeking continuity in relationships with their children: Commitment, personal change, and reliance on others.
- Author
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Violi, Dominic, Kwok, Cannas, Lewis, Peter, and Wilson, Nathan J.
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FATHER-child relationship ,ABSENTEE fathers ,FATHERHOOD ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,DIVORCED fathers - Abstract
Objective: To explore intrinsic and extrinsic factors that help nonresident fathers' continuing relationships with their children. Background: Research on nonresident fathers tends to focus on rates or trajectories of contact and the perspectives or experiences of children or others and highlights significant barriers to development and maintenance of relationships between nonresident fathers and their children. What helps the growth and development of nonresident fathers' relationships with their children are less well understood and less frequently researched. This research sought to fill the gap in the literature of what is known that helps nonresident fathers maintain meaningful relationships with their children. Method: A qualitative research approach was chosen using thematic analysis of semistructured, in‐depth interviews. Recruitment was via social media and community sites targeting nonresident fathers after divorce. Results: Participants highlighted deep commitment to ongoing fathering and a deep desire for meaningful relationships with children. The experience of divorce had a highly negative impact, but some positives emerged that enhanced their relationship. Significant others played contingent roles helping participants improve their relationships with their children. Conclusion: Continuity of relationships with children was the direct result of participants' actions to remain involved and their ongoing commitment to their children through strong and unwavering fatherhood role salience. These factors, together with actions for self‐improvement, managing change, and fostering cooperative relationships with relevant others, helped fathers maintain positive engagement and relationships with their children. Implications: The nonresident fathers in this study relied on their own initiatives, resilience, and resources to remain engaged with their children. Policies and programs should respond to and encourage the development of policies and programs that help nonresident fathers' relationships with children in practical and meaningful ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Negotiating Good Parenthood in Swedish Climate Change Fiction.
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Björklund, Jenny
- Subjects
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CLIMATE change in literature , *CLIMATE change , *PARENTHOOD in literature , *PARENTHOOD , *PARENTS - Abstract
How can you be a good parent to a child who, with the current speed of global warming, will likely live their adult life in a world ravaged by floods, wildfires, and pandemics? In the absence of scholarship that centres the question of how to be a good parent in times of climate change, fictional literature can provide a way to explore this dilemma. This article analyzes how parenthood is conceptualized in relation to environmental consciousness as well as gendered and national ideals of good parenthood in two contemporary Swedish climate change novels, Jens Liljestrand’s
Även om allt tar slut (Even If Everything Ends ) and Anna Dahlqvist’sDet är tropiska nätter nu (Now We Have Tropical Nights). Liljestrand’s novel depicts how ideals anchored in Swedish family politics trump environmental consciousness when it comes to good parenthood, and it suggests that parents need to take responsibility for the climate crisis. The climate-friendly motherhood represented in Dahlqvist’s novel fails, but it also challenges Swedish family ideals and is in some respects an answer to the call in Liljestrand’s novel: that parents take responsibility for climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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11. An Example of Gender Construction of Children From Different Socio‐Economic Levels Through the Phenomenon of Parenting.
- Author
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Kurt, Şerife Hülya
- Subjects
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PARENTHOOD , *PARENTS , *QUALITATIVE research , *INCOME , *HOUSEHOLDS , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
ABSTRACT This study examined the transmission of gender within the family through perceptions of parenting in low‐ and middle‐income families. Phenomenology design, one of the qualitative research methods, was used in the study. Participants were determined by criterion sampling method. Data were collected from 60 participants, including 20 families (mother–father–child) representing low (10 families) and middle (10 families) socio‐economic levels. The study reveals that there is a need for social intervention in both socio‐economic contexts. The findings of the study showed that the gendered interactions of parents living in both socio‐economic contexts within the family had effects on children's perceptions and experiences. In the study, parents in both socio‐economic contexts characterized motherhood as sacrifice, caregiving, and fertility and fatherhood as authority, power, income, and security provider. Children, on the other hand, defined motherhood as providing care, fertility, and being responsible for household chores and fatherhood as providing income, meeting needs, and having a profession. A striking result of the study is that although both parents were employed, children preferred to use expressions related to the fathers' professional life while defining parenthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Committed and Responsible: Single Fathers in Swedish Dailies.
- Author
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Wahlström Henriksson, Helena and Bergnehr, Disa
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SINGLE parents , *FAMILY policy , *PARENTHOOD , *FATHERS , *FATHERHOOD , *MOTHERS - Abstract
This article investigates representations of single fathers in major Swedish newspapers 2010–2020, the gendered meanings of these constructions, and how they relate to gendered and socio-historically specific situations of single parents in Sweden. In newspapers, the term “single father” is broadly used to reference different familial situations, ranging from “only parent” to “co-parent.” There is no vilification of single fathers as a group or as individuals, which stands out in international comparison but is consistent with dominant discourses on single parenthood – and fathers – in Sweden. Single fathers are represented as successfully combining breadwinning and caregiving, flexible in their management of time-with-children, and reflexive regarding their parenthood. Overall, newspapers construct (good) single fathers as spending substantial time with their children and demonstrating “temporal conscience.” Seen against demographic statistics, two results stand out: first, that there are so few single fathers in the dailies, and second, that there is an overrepresentation of fathers with sole residential custody, and of fathers who share residential custody equally with a mother. These representations result in an exaggerated picture of single fathers’ time and engagement with children, which speaks to national father-friendly and gender-equality-oriented family policy and ideals of fatherhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Development, Acceptability, and Initial Implementation of an Interactive Text-Messaging Program for Fathers with Low Income.
- Author
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Lee, Joyce Y., Lee, Shawna J., Xu, Amy, Steinke, Hannah, and Weiland, Christina
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HOME care services , *COMMUNITY health services , *HUMAN services programs , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *INCOME , *FATHERHOOD , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CONTENT analysis , *FATHERS' attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *RACE , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ANALYSIS of variance , *TEXT messages , *SOCIAL support , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Objectives: This study describes the development, acceptability, and implementation of an interactive text messaging program to engage fathers enrolled in home visitation programs. Methods: We used an iterative development approach that integrated rapid testing of intervention content with acceptability feedback from program participants to examine the processes of implementation. In Study 1, we describe the rapid testing framework and present data from 171 men who provided feedback on Text4Dad content via three online surveys. In Study 2, a case study, we use administrative data from 108 fathers with whom we pilot-tested Text4Dad in three community-based home visiting programs, with the program implemented by fatherhood program community health workers (F-CHWs). Content analysis of exchanges between F-CHWs and fathers describes the specific use of Text4Dad. Results: Across all three online surveys, fathers reported positive reviews of the Text4Dad content. The F-CHWs used Text4Dad mainly to push out information, especially that related to home visit scheduling and local events, instead of engaging in bidirectional interactions with fathers. Conclusions for Practice: We conclude with a set of recommendations for social service and maternal and child health providers regarding the feasibility of implementing text messaging to support home visiting in community-based settings. Significance: What is Already Known on this Subject?: In leveraging mobile technology for behavioral change, there has been a proliferation of text messaging parenting interventions. Innovative texting and technology-focused programs for fathers have been developed and implemented, with a focus on improving fathering quality, father-child interactions, program fidelity, and measures relevant to the duration, timing, and context of programs. That said, the effectiveness of these programs has been challenging to ascertain and compare, given and unique programmatic aspects of each intervention and lack of robust program evaluation designs. What this Study adds?: Most father-inclusive text messaging interventions are stand-alone programs. Importantly, Text4Dad is one of the first programs to serve as an add-on to an existing community-based home visitation model, with the goal of engaging fathers who are from low-income contexts and receiving in-home visits. This initial implementation study shows the promise of a low-cost and mentor-based text messaging program that is appealing and useful for fathers and male CHWs serving them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. 'Send the midwife': The Birth of Blackness in Titus Andronicus.
- Author
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Bui, Hanh
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MIDWIVES , *MIDWIFERY , *INFANTS , *CHILDBIRTH , *PATERNITY , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
This article examines a neglected context for understanding the ontology and epistemology of race in Shakespeare's drama: the role of the midwife. Early modern midwives performed an important cultural function by not only assisting women in labour, but also pronouncing the sex and paternity of a newborn. As Caroline Bicks has shown, this was a time when a midwife was thought to have significant influence over how a body was literally shaped and interpreted at the moment of its birth, thereby determining its reception in the community. Nowhere in Shakespeare's canon is the midwife's authority more manifest – and threatening – than in Titus Andronicus, where the midwife's role includes establishing an infant's race. After Tamora, Empress of Rome, delivers a baby fathered by her lover, Aaron 'the Moor', he asks: 'How many saw the child?' By subsequently killing the birth attendants, Aaron calls attention to how controlling the destiny of his son will depend upon rewriting the script of his nativity. Merging critical interest in early modern childbirth with Shakespeare scholarship on race and performance, I show how newly born bodies are midwived into racialized subjects, illuminating how midwifery discourses can broaden our understanding of early modern racecraft. My specific claim is that the statements made by Tamora's nurse concerning Aaron's 'black' son can be read as a performative utterance that confers, constitutes and attempts to naturalize the newborn's raced identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The role of non‐base compensation in explaining the motherhood wage gap: Evidence from Italy.
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Badaoui, Eliane, Matteazzi, Eleonora, and Prete, Vincenzo
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INCOME inequality , *REGIONAL disparities , *LABOR incentives , *MOTHERHOOD , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
This paper underlines the importance of accounting for non‐base compensation in explaining the motherhood wage gap. We consider two alternative measures of hourly wage using Italian EU‐SILC data from 2007 to 2019: the base‐wage and the full‐wage. The former refers to the contractual base wage, while the latter includes performance‐based bonuses, productivity bonuses, commissions, pay incentives, and other extra payments. We address the endogeneity issues of motherhood and examine the effect of motherhood status across various quantiles of the wage distribution for the two hourly wage measures. Empirical findings provide evidence of a motherhood base‐wage premium, which becomes nonsignificant when using the full‐wage measure, suggesting that non‐base compensation is a source of inequality for mothers. These findings are consistent across the wage distribution. Exploring potential heterogeneity across macro‐regions and periods, we find no notable regional disparities except minor distinctions for the Southern regions, alongside a decline in the base‐wage premium over time and the emergence of a full‐wage penalty in recent years. A comparative analysis with a sample of men reveals that fathers enjoy a premium with both wage measures. Nevertheless, fatherhood is also associated with reduced extra remunerations, yet to a lesser extent than motherhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. The Association Between Latino Cultural Concepts and Fatherhood Identity on Stigma for Fathers With a Child With a Disability.
- Author
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Mogro‐Wilson, Cristina, Longo, Emily, Loomis, Alysse, and Rose, Devon Musson
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FATHERHOOD , *HISPANIC Americans , *SOCIAL stigma , *ACCULTURATION , *FATHERS , *DISABILITIES - Abstract
ABSTRACT This study focuses on Latino fathers and investigates the role that cultural concepts and fatherhood identity play in the stigma associated with having a child with a disability. Disability stigma is a widely held concept that acknowledges the role of culture; however, there is a lack of information on Latino fathers. Using a panel survey provider a US cross‐sectional survey was completed by 92 Latino fathers who had a child with a disability. Multiple regression was used to investigate the relationship of cultural Latino constructs (personalismo, machismo, caballerismo and respeto) and fatherhood identity on the stigma experiences of Latino fathers who have a child with a disability while controlling for the child's age and acculturation (
R 2 = 0.43,p < 0.001). Latino fathers with higher levels of personalismo (p = 0.05), and fatherhood identity (p < 0.001) had lower levels of stigma. Latino fathers with high levels of machismo had high levels of stigma (p < 0.001). There was no significant relationship between caballerismo and respeto towards stigma. Specific recommendations for Latino fathers include (1) the development of personalismo by focusing on the child–parent relationship; (2) a re‐frame of machismo to focus instead on caballerismo characteristics to de‐emphasize harmful effects on stigma experiences; and (3) heightening the identity as a father as a protective mechanism to strengthen resilience from stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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17. Reconsidering gender norms in childcare within Chinese migrant families in Portugal.
- Author
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Yaqun Li, Rabot, Jean Martin, and Costa, Rosalina Pisco
- Subjects
SOCIAL surveys ,CULTURE ,FAMILY support ,SOCIAL norms ,MARITAL status ,FATHERHOOD ,MATE selection ,GRANDPARENTS ,ACCULTURATION - Abstract
The article delves into the challenges faced by Chinese migrant families in Portugal as they navigate Western norms while preserving their cultural heritage. It examines shifting gender roles in childcare, with women increasingly entering the workforce and men's expectations influenced by education and finances. The study underscores the impact of Confucian culture on migrants' perspectives and proposes solutions to address gender disparities. It also explores household responsibilities among dual-income couples in China, highlighting the influence of family dynamics and cultural norms on gender roles. The research sheds light on the complexities of cultural adaptation and family dynamics within immigrant communities, emphasizing the need to reevaluate gender norms and childcare practices among Chinese migrants in Portugal. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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18. Parenthood and parental responsibility: legal messaging and the power of law.
- Author
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Lind, Craig
- Subjects
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LEGAL liability , *DISPUTE resolution , *PARENTHOOD , *FATHERHOOD , *PARENTS - Abstract
In this paper I will engage with a position Felicity Kaganas has often elaborated upon, and with which I agree, namely, that lawmakers often mistake law’s messaging for law’s power. In doing so I will focus on the law’s management of parental status and the performance of parental responsibility. I will argue that English law’s disaggregation of parental status and parental function should have enabled law to distance itself from involvement-by-presumption in the particularities of the disputes between parents and other carers about children, and enabled it to perform a better, more situation-sensitive role in the management of those disputes. It should have allowed for a more pragmatic, less ideological and generalised, decision-making process for particular disputes, and paid better attention to the actual children at the heart of those disputes. I argue that, given the limits of the power of law in resolving family disputes (which I also elaborate in the paper), law has a limited role in these situations. There are other orders of power – beyond law – which affect the way in which legal power works and may misdirect (or, at least, redirect) its ambitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Parenthood premium but fatherhood super-premium in academic productivity? A matter of partner's employment.
- Author
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Tattarini, Giulia, Gorodetskaya, Olga, and Vitali, Agnese
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DIVISION of labor , *WOMEN'S employment , *GENDER inequality , *PARENTHOOD , *FATHERHOOD , *SCHOLARLY publishing - Abstract
While the discourse about work-family balance in academia (and elsewhere) is generally framed as a woman's issue, this study focuses on the association between childbirth and the scholarly productivity of both academic women and men. In particular, the authors examine whether the association between parenthood and scholarly productivity is contingent on gender and partner's employment status. Using German longitudinal data and addressing self-selection, results indicate the existence of a ‘parenthood premium’: scholarly productivity is higher for both fathers and mothers compared to their childless counterparts. Yet, academic fathers publish more than childless men and more than academic mothers, giving rise to a ‘fatherhood super-premium’. Additionally, the study reveals that the fatherhood super-premium is influenced by the employment status of the female partner, while this is not the case for academic mothers. Overall, the research highlights the importance of considering the division of labour within couples in understanding the gender gap in scholarly productivity and, ultimately, gender disparities in academia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. ‘It really freed me up … to work’: Australian mothers’ experiences of living with fathers who work part-time.
- Author
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Mercier, Eric, Le Couteur, Amanda, and Delfabbro, Paul
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SOCIAL norms , *STAY-at-home fathers , *WORKING mothers , *PART-time employment , *INGROUPS (Social groups) , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
The literature about mothers and engaged fatherhood is expanding; however, current research focuses on breadwinner mothers living with stay-at-home fathers. Knowledge about the experiences of mothers who live with part-time working fathers is scarce. The current study focuses on Australian breadwinner mothers' experiences within such a family arrangement. Interviews with 15 mothers were analysed with Reflexive Thematic Analysis. Two themes emerged: (1) a recurrent contrast by mothers of their experiences at work and at home (the arrangement was described as contributing to their career, but as disrupting traditional mothering) and (2) a repeated comparison by mothers between themselves and their partners in relation to work and parenting (career was suggested as more important for participants, and fathers were suggested as being better suited for child-rearing). Both themes commonly and positively presented the family arrangement as well balanced. In their talk, participants balanced the family arrangement's flaws with its benefits. Furthermore, participants' positioning suggested an identification to an in-group which aligned to traditional motherhood while deviating from traditional feminine norms. As societal norms shift towards greater gender equality, this study helps increase awareness of the variety of contemporary mothering practices, by reporting experiences of mothers who adopt non-traditional mothering practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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21. Fathers' use of extended parental leave: exploring company barriers in Sweden.
- Author
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Haas, Linda and Hwang, C. Philip
- Subjects
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HUMAN resource directors , *PARENTAL leave , *GREAT men & women , *PARENT-child legal relationship , *ATTITUDES toward work , *FATHERHOOD , *FATHERS - Abstract
In Sweden, men's parental leave rights are considered important for realizing gender equality. Men have the same compensated leave rights as women: three months each of nontransferable and transferable leave. Nevertheless, less than 20% of couples share leave equally (each taking 40% or more of all leave days). Understanding the circumstances under which fathers take leave beyond nontransferable months is important if equality is to be realized, yet few studies investigate this. Our survey of human resource directors in Sweden's top companies revealed extended leave use was not normative for fathers’ and especially male top managers and aspects of the gendered culture and structure of work organizations were associated with less extended leave use. Company awareness of parental leaves benefits for the company was significantly and independently related to fathers’ and top male managers' extended leave use. Positive workplace attitudes and less job specialization increased fathers’ extended leave use. Companies’ setting fewer conditions encouraged more top male managers to take extended leave, as did a policy of managerial training to facilitate fathers’ leaves. Greater understanding of company barriers to fathers’ extended parental leave use may encourage companies to remove those barriers which can increase fathers’ use of extended parental leave. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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22. Gay Dads to Be: Reflections on Gender, Sexuality, Family, and Race in Adoption and Surrogacy.
- Author
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Underwood, S. W.
- Subjects
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GAY men , *FATHERHOOD , *RACE , *PARENTHOOD , *CAREGIVERS , *SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Prospective gay fathers must carefully prepare, plan, and think about parenting—often for years—before they become parents. This article explores how different paths to parenthood provide opportunities for Canadian gay men to reflect upon their preferences for surrogacy or adoption, the meaning of fatherhood in the absence of a woman as a primary caregiver, and the opportunities and potential shortcomings of gay fatherhood. Based on analysis of 23 in-depth, semi-structured interviews with Canadian prospective gay fathers, I show that adoption and surrogacy foster different degrees of reflection along the journey to fatherhood. I argue that gay men who pursue surrogacy express masculine competence and draw upon scripts of conventional fatherhood, while gay men who pursue adoption experience a disruption in their masculine competence and must reflect on their potential inadequacies as male parents. Further, I include a brief discussion of some counterevidence: these pressures on the journey to gay fatherhood can be resisted through a queer, anti-racist, and feminist consciousness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Parents' Influences on Well-being in Emerging Adulthood: The Role of Basic Psychological Needs.
- Author
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Green, David S., Goldstein, Abby L., Zhu, Joyce Y., Hamza, Chloe A., Scharfe, Elaine, and Molnar, Danielle S.
- Subjects
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ADOLESCENT development , *RESEARCH funding , *SATISFACTION , *FATHERHOOD , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *PARENT-child relationships , *PARENTING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PARENT attitudes , *NEED (Psychology) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MOTHERHOOD , *WELL-being , *TRANSITION to adulthood , *HUMAN life cycle , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS - Abstract
Previous research on parent‒child relationships has focused more extensively on younger, school-aged children and adolescents, with mothers receiving more attention than fathers. In addition, there has been a greater focus on problematic parenting (e.g., helicopter parenting) and less research on supportive forms of parenting that can promote positive outcomes during emerging adulthood. The current study utilized the framework of self-determination theory to examine the association between positive parenting and well-being in a sample of emerging adults. Specifically, we examined the associations between positive maternal and paternal parenting approaches and emerging adults' basic psychological needs and well-being, with a focus on emerging adults of diverse ethnicities. Our primary hypotheses were that positive parenting would have significant: (a) direct associations with emerging adults' basic psychological needs and (b) indirect associations with emerging adults' well-being through their basic psychological needs. The participants were 1209 emerging adults aged 18–22 years (M = 19.27; SD = 1.53). The results revealed that parenting had significant positive direct effects on emerging adults' basic psychological needs and indirect associations with their well-being. These findings suggest that positive parenting continues to play an important role in emerging adulthood and highlight the need to work with emerging adults and their parents to establish strategies to support positive parenting that meet psychological needs during this time of life. Highlights: Mothers and fathers make significant and unique contributions to emerging adults' basic psychological needs. Among a diverse sample of emerging adults in North America, the satisfaction of emerging adults' basic psychological needs, including the positive contributions of both mothers and fathers, is important to their well-being and satisfaction with life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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24. Men in Romance: A Scoping Review to Explore Men's Experience in Romantic Relationships in the Patriarchal Cultural Context.
- Author
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Himawan, Karel Karsten, Sutanto, Sandra H., Pratiwi, Pradipta Christy, and Eriksson, Lars
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- *
EVIDENCE gaps , *MASCULINITY , *FATHERHOOD , *HETEROSEXUALS , *LITERATURE , *FEMALES - Abstract
The current body of literature is weighted to the female perspective in exploring the perception and experience of romantic relationships. The paucity of literature on the male perspective provides an opportunity to highlight the unique masculine view attached to relationships. The current scoping review is aimed at summarizing the available literature about the perception and experience of men in various romantic, heterosexual relationship contexts. The findings were drawn from 163 studies published in the last 10 years that were extracted from multiple databases, including SCOPUS, PsycINFO, Web of Science, and Pubmed. The current masculine perceptions associated with romantic relationships were captured and grouped through four contexts: man as a relational being, man in a state of singleness, man as a partner, and man as a parent. Power and sex appear to be the key drivers of research about men across relationship contexts. This study contributes to the literature by identifying the current research gap and providing clearer directions in research about romantic relationships that take into account the perspectives of men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. Flawed Fatherhoods in the Cinema of Jaime Rosales: The Father's Unmet Gaze.
- Author
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Gutiérrez de Terán, Juan Orellana y. and Espadas, Javier Figuero
- Subjects
- *
LIGHTWEIGHT construction , *WILD flowers , *FATHERHOOD , *ROSALES , *GAZE - Abstract
Since his beginnings, Jaime Rosales has directed seven feature films: The Hours of the Day (2003), Solitary Fragments (2007), Tiro en la cabeza (A Shot in the Head) (2008), Dream and Silence (2011), Beautiful Youth (2014), Petra (2018) and Wild Flowers (2022). In his films, the maternal-filial bond becomes the strongest factor in the lives of his characters, but in almost all of his films this bond is treated in parallel with paternalfilial relationships --which this research focuses on. Rosales portrays various models of fatherhood, some clearly failed and others in the light of positive construction. This study aims to analyse, through qualitative and filmic analysis, the design and evolution of these characters, to search for a pattern of fatherhood with common characteristics, to determine if it is a personal theme in the films of Rosales, and to investigate cinematographic resources that specifically make an original portrait of fatherhood. In this sense, we discover that in Rosales' cinema, the father's gaze hardly meets that of the son, daughter, or couple, and for this, the director uses various visual strategies such as polyvision, the subjective shot, or panoramic shots to ensure that these gazes, in fact, almost never meet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Feelings, thoughts and experiences of fathers in the early postpartum period: a phenomenological study.
- Author
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Ozcan, Sadiye and Kirca, Nurcan
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL personnel , *SLEEP deprivation , *PUERPERIUM , *PARENTHOOD , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
Aims/BackgroundDesign/MethodsResultsConclusionTransition to parenthood is a complex and challenging situation not only for mothers but also for fathers. In this process, fathers’ feelings, thoughts and experiences are very important. This study aims to understand fathers’ feelings, thoughts and experiences in the early postpartum period.The descriptive phenomenological design was used in this study. Data were collected from 13 fathers through in-depth interviews. The content analysis method was used in data analysis.The following three themes were identified regarding the experiences of fathers in the early postpartum period: ‘need for support’, ‘difficulties of being a father’ and ‘recommendations’. The fathers had more needs and inadequate support in their transition to the fatherhood role.All these results suggest that they faced many challenges in the early postpartum period. Sleep deprivation, being tired, having a restricted social life and increased responsibilities, and experiencing postpartum psychological fluctuations were some of these difficulties. In order to overcome these difficulties, they needed financial and moral support. The fathers who participated in the present study stated that they did not receive enough training and support from healthcare professionals. Healthcare professionals should keep in mind that not only of mothers and babies but also of fathers have needs to be met. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Does the (socio-political) socialization context matter for paternal involvement?
- Author
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Eichhorn, Thomas and Zerle-Elsäßer, Claudia
- Subjects
- *
CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *GOVERNMENT policy , *FATHERHOOD , *FATHERS' attitudes , *PARENTAL leave , *PARENTING , *FATHER-child relationship , *SOCIAL attitudes , *SOCIAL skills , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIALIZATION , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations - Abstract
Previous literature on paternal involvement emphasizes the influence of fathers' socialization contexts, considering either welfare policies (Hipp and Leuze, 2015) or experiences with their own fathers (Brown et al., 2018; Parke, 1995). In this study, we combine those two branches of research and examine how fathers' and their fathers' (grandfathers') socialization experiences (parental leave regulations in their early adulthood as an example of (de-)familization policies (Lohmann and Zagel, 2016)) predict paternal involvement today. To measure paternal involvement, we create an indicator for involvement that covers Lamb et al. (1985) three aspects of direct interaction, responsibility, and availability and the fact that a father has taken paternal leave for at least one of his children or not. We use the fact that a substantial proportion of the fathers in the German, national survey AID:A 2019 (Kuger et al., 2020) were socialized in another welfare state regime (6.3% of fathers have a direct and another 13.5% have an indirect migration background (their fathers were born in another country) covering birth cohorts from the 1970s to the 1990s; total N = 1053). We then add context-related information on their (fathers' and grandfathers') countries of origin from the OECD family database and estimate an SEM model to test potential direct and indirect effects. We find that more educated fathers who experienced extended parental leave regulations are more involved fathers today. Our results support, thus, that welfare state conditions influence individuals' behaviour while education is a relevant moderator in this relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Fathering Identities and Men's Engagement With Flexible Working Arrangements.
- Author
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Ewald, Alina, Gilbert, Emilee, Huppatz, Kate, and Kurt, Perin
- Subjects
- *
FLEXIBLE work arrangements , *SEMI-structured interviews , *FATHERHOOD , *MASCULINE identity , *DISCOURSE analysis , *FATHERS , *QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
This research examines how fathering identities and normative gendered expectations shape the way men engage with a broad range of flexible working arrangements (FWAs). Forty-three heterosexual white-collar Australian fathers participated in this qualitative research, involving one-to-one semi structured interviews which were discursively analysed using Foucauldian Discourse Analysis. Three fathering identities emerged from the data: "The Present and Visible Father", "The Involved and Competent Father", and "The Father as Helper." The findings demonstrate that fathering identities have a profound impact on men's flexible working practices, that fathering identity is fluid and complex, and that a tension still exists between the expectations surrounding involved fathering, persistent traditional fathering norms, and the material reality of men's work practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Single fathers and work–family conflict in white- and blue-collar jobs.
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Iztayeva, Aimzhan
- Subjects
- *
SINGLE parents , *WORKING parents , *LAYOFFS , *GOVERNMENT liability , *PARENTING , *FATHERHOOD , *FATHERS - Abstract
Existing research points towards an overall intensification of parenting expectations including newer expectations for fathers' involvement in caregiving. At the same time, the ideal worker norm persists, and employers continue to expect men's full and uninterrupted work commitment. This article explores what these competing expectations attached to work and parenting mean for single fathers. To do so, the article draws on 30 in-depth interviews with a sample of working single fathers with primary caregiving responsibility in the United States and differentiates between those with white- and blue-collar jobs. The study finds that both white- and blue-collar single fathers prioritize caregiving and resist the ideal worker norm and, as a result, experience work–family conflict. Resolving this conflict becomes single fathers' individual responsibility, and the resources to resolve it are primarily available to white-collar men in the form of understanding supervisors and access to workplace flexibility. Blue-collar single fathers need to be more creative and resourceful in reconciling their caregiving and breadwinning roles. Inability to resolve work–family conflict can lead to job penalties such as reduced income and/or a job loss, which are found across different job types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. "These are His Rules, Our Rules": Constructions of Fathers as Disciplinarians Within Low-Income Families of the Western Cape.
- Author
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Macleod, Georgia and Lesch, Elmien
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- *
POOR families , *FATHERHOOD , *SOCIAL conflict , *SOCIALIZATION , *CORPORAL punishment , *GENDER stereotypes - Abstract
Parental discipline is an important aspect of a child's socialization and has been adapted over time as social views on disciplinary approaches have changed. Although both parents play a role in carrying out discipline, fathers are frequently viewed as the ultimate disciplinary figure, and their methods are often associated with harsh and aggressive practices. Thus, the recent prohibition of corporal punishment in South Africa has added heightened relevance to the question of how families are currently constructing paternal discipline within the home. The current study sought to explore, from a social constructionist perspective, how family units (comprised of a mother, father, and adolescent child) from three low-income Western Cape communities make meaning of the father's role in discipline. An inductive thematic analysis revealed that traditionally gendered stereotypes prevail in the construction of fathers as the more effective disciplinarian in the household. However, family members' emphasis on fathers' non-violent, gentle disciplinary methods indicates a shift in social expectations, in line with a more emotionally attuned, caring expression of masculinity and fatherhood. The gender of the adolescent was found to influence both the manner in which paternal discipline was conducted and perceived. These findings foreground social tensions between traditionally gendered power relations and roles, and contemporary constructions of a softer, more authoritative paternal disciplinarian in these communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Factors Associated with Fatherhood Program Engagement and Completion: Lessons Learned from Participating Fathers.
- Author
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Cheng, Shih-Ying, Kohl, Patricia L., King, Courtney, Krauss, Melissa J., Goodwin, Destini N., Tillis, Cheri D., Fowler, Patrick J., and Mueller, Nancy B.
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITY organization , *CHILD support , *FATHERHOOD , *AFRICAN Americans , *COURT orders , *WELL-being - Abstract
It is evident that father engagement in parenting contributes to child well-being, and fatherhood programs effectively enhance father engagement and employment outcomes. However, program effectiveness can be compromised if participating fathers drop out. This study investigates factors associated with program engagement (i.e., initiating treatment) and completion (i.e., attending 75% or more sessions) with a sample of primarily African American fathers recruited from a community-based organization in the United States (n = 691). The analysis showed that nearly one-third (31%) of enrolled fathers did not attend any program session, and just over half (55%) of those who attended at least one session completed the program. Being older was associated with program engagement, while having a high school diploma and being ordered by the court to pay child support were associated with program completion. Fathers expressed several barriers to program participation, including programmatic and institutional issues (Rules and Staff, Fit Misaligned with Needs), as well as scheduling and external factors (Job-Related Conflict, Logistic Issues, Challenging Life Events). These findings highlight the importance of identifying participant motivation, addressing life challenges, and implementing strengths-based practices in fatherhood programs to make fathers feel seen, welcomed, and supported. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Heterogenous causal effects: Potentials and pitfalls as illustrated with fatherhood and earnings.
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Fallesen, Peter, Andersen, Lars Højsgaard, and Elwert, Felix
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FATHERHOOD ,WAGES ,LABOR market ,HETEROGENEITY - Abstract
Objective: To discuss how methods to estimate heterogenous causal effects can be applied in Family Science and to supply empirical examples using the case of fatherhood and earnings. Background: Many questions important to family scientists do not focus on one‐size‐fits‐all average effects but rather on whether and how effects differ across groups. Recent methodological advances can assist this latter focus, offering new insights for theory and policy. Method: Using Danish administrative data on all men who entered fatherhood 2005–2016 and on men of comparable age who did not, we focus on two types of heterogeneity in effects. First, effect heterogeneity across observed and unobserved covariates; second, treatment effect heterogeneity across the distribution of outcome variables. Results: The fatherhood premium on annual labor income is, in fact, a fatherhood penalty on average and across most margins of heterogeneity. Substantial heterogeneity exists across observed and unobserved characteristics and across the distribution of labor market earnings, with results indicating larger penalties for lower earners and those least likely to become fathers. Conclusions: Effect heterogeneity in Family Science holds great potential to inform policy and theory. However, causal interpretations always require assumptions, and researchers must be vigilant that the assumptions they make are warranted for each specific application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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33. Caregiving Experience With a Young Father With Multiple Myeloma Undergoing Renal Dialysis and Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation.
- Author
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Huei-Shiuan WANG
- Subjects
FATHERHOOD & psychology ,INJURY risk factors ,MULTIPLE myeloma diagnosis ,INFECTION risk factors ,HEMODIALYSIS patients ,HEMATOPOIETIC stem cell transplantation ,MULTIPLE myeloma ,RISK assessment ,PSYCHOLOGY of fathers ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,MENTAL health ,MALNUTRITION ,INFECTION control ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,FATHERS' attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ANXIETY ,NURSING interventions ,BURDEN of care ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,ISOLATION (Hospital care) ,QUALITY of life ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,WELL-being ,DISEASE progression ,DISEASE risk factors ,ADULTS - Abstract
This case report addresses the author's experience providing nursing care to a 37-year-old patient diagnosed with multiple myeloma requiring regular renal dialysis due to disease progression who received autologous stem cell transplantation. The patient was diagnosed with cancer in young adulthood and, as a father figure, faced various psychological issues associated with the unexpected challenges encountered during their treatment phase. Psychosocial health, which is closely associated with quality of life in patients with cancer, has gained increasing attention in recent years. The limited research published on the subject of fathers diagnosed with cancer encouraged the author to detail her experience with this case. The care period was from August 5th to August 19th, 2022. During the care period, the Gordons's 11 functional health assessment was applied, with potentially severe infections, coping disorders, anxiety, potential risk of injury existing or potential nutritional deficiencies, oral mucosal changes, and diarrhea identified as the primary health problems of concern. Nursing interventions applied included providing protective isolation measures to prevent post-transplant infection, helping the patient learn effective ways to cope with emotional distress, and providing comprehensive follow-up care information and health education to alleviate the anxiety associated with hospital discharge and life after discharge. The challenges of providing nursing care to adolescent and young adult patients differ significantly from those faced in the care of either elderly or pediatric patients. Furthermore, although extensive research has been conducted on mothers diagnosed with cancer, little research has addressed the impact on the paternal role when fathers are diagnosed with cancer, with limited information available regarding their psychological concerns and issues or the impact on family dynamics. The author hopes this case care experience offers an insightful reference and guide for nursing practice that contributes to a better understanding of the psychological aspects of young adult fathers diagnosed with cancer and facilitates more appropriate care in clinical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Parenthood and gender inequality on labor market outcomes: Evidence from South Korea.
- Author
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Kim, Eunha and Hong, Baegeui
- Subjects
WOMEN'S wages ,GENDER wage gap ,MARRIED people ,WAGE increases ,MARRIED women ,FATHERHOOD ,FATHERS - Abstract
This study estimates the long‐term effect of parenthood on labor market outcomes and explores the variations within this effect by gender and education. We use the event study method to track changes in a range of labor market outcomes from 3 years before to 8 years after the first birth, with a sample of 556 married women and 528 married men from the Korea Labor and Income Panel Study (KLIPS). We find that women experience an immediate drop in wages following birth, whereas men experience continuous wage growth even before birth. The decline in women's wages arises largely from their withdrawal from the labor market, while the increase in men's wages could be explained by a positive selection bias among fathers. In addition, mothers' wage trajectories do not vary significantly by education level, whereas other labor market outcomes show discernible trends. These patterns are the opposite of those observed for men. The findings indicate that severe gender inequality in the Korean labor market lowers the wages of mothers, regardless of their education, while the wages of fathers are more likely to be affected by education. Based on the findings, we make policy suggestions for improving the work‐family balance for all genders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
35. Guadalupan Motherhood Forming Priestly Fatherhood: On building a church stamped with Mary's imprint.
- Author
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Davis, Kenneth
- Subjects
- *
CHRISTIAN spirituality , *FATHERHOOD , *PRIESTHOOD , *COMPASSION , *CATHOLIC priests - Abstract
The article reflects on the role of spiritual fatherhood in the priesthood, drawing inspiration from the story of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the figure of Juan Diego to emphasize the need for priests to embody compassion, humility, and inclusivity. Topics include spiritual fatherhood, the example of Mary in fostering a sense of belonging, and the contrast between priests who focus on personal image versus those who build a welcoming community.
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- 2024
36. Al Pacino Tells All (But He's No Rat).
- Author
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ANDERSSON, ERIC
- Subjects
- *
PERFORMING arts , *ACTING education , *FILM sequels , *VOCAL cords , *ATTEMPTED suicide , *FATHERHOOD , *MEMOIRS - Abstract
Al Pacino's memoir, Sonny Boy, provides insights into his life and career. In the book, Pacino recounts how he landed the role of Michael Corleone in The Godfather, despite Paramount initially wanting other actors for the part. Pacino also discusses his upbringing in the South Bronx, his struggles with fame, and his journey to sobriety. The memoir offers a personal and candid look into the life of the legendary actor. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
37. Representasi Pola Komunikasi Fatherhood dalam Kisah Al-Qur’an
- Author
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Ridwan Rustandi and Haifa Hanifah
- Subjects
fatherhood ,pola komunikasi ,dialog iman ,kisah al-qur’an. ,The family. Marriage. Woman ,HQ1-2044 - Abstract
Indonesia menjadi negara yang diakui krisis peran ayah, bahkan Indonesia sempat diperbincangkan sebagai negara ketiga yang mengalami fatherless atau ketiadaan peran ayah dalam proses pengasuhan. Salah satu aspek penting dalam proses pengasuhan orang tua terhadap anak adalah komunikasi efektif, terutama antara ayah dan anaknya. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menganalisis pola komunikasi fatherhood atau dialog antara ayah dan anak yang termaktub dalam al-Qur’an. Penelitian diarahkan dengan menganalisis proses komunikasi yang direpresentasikan oleh para nabi dan/atau oleh keluarga nabi. Penelitian dilakukan dengan pendekatan kualitatif melalui paradigma interpretasi klasik-kontemporer. Penelitian merupakan jenis penelitian kepustakaan (library research) melalui metode analisis deskriptif. Pengumpulan data dilakukan secara tematis yaitu mengumpulkan ayat-ayat Al-Qur’an dalam berbagai surat yang menggambarkan representasi pola komunikasi fatherhood. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa pola komunikasi dialogis antara ayah dan anak bertujuan untuk membangun kesadaran ketauhidan. Proses komunikasi yang terbangun sebagai representasi fatherhood dipengaruhi oleh beberapa kondisi atau suasana komunikasi yang terjalin. Proses komunikasi terjadi juga melalui dua pola baik secara komunikasi langsung maupun tidak langsung. Pola komunikasi terbangun secara persuasif, emansipatif, partisipatif, demokratis, dan empatik. Selain itu, proses komunikasi dialogis dalam proses pengasuhan ayah terhadap anaknya berlangsung secara lembut, penuh kasih kayang, dialogis, interaktif, negosiasi, dan memengaruhi aspek rasional, emosional, motivasional, dan behavioural.
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- 2024
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38. Adverse Childhood Experience, Parental Bonding, and Fatherhood as Parenting Vulnerabilities to Social Anxiety Severity
- Author
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Rasoul Heshmati, Nazanin Seyed Yaghoubi Pour, Parisa Haji Abbasoghli, and Mojtaba Habibi Asgarabad
- Subjects
adverse childhood experience ,social anxiety ,parenting vulnerabilities ,parental bonding ,fatherhood ,anxious thought ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Background: The present study aims to elucidate the association between adverse childhood experiences, parental bonding, fatherhood, and social anxiety symptoms among emerging adults within an Iranian context. Methods: This prospective cross-sectional study utilized self-reported assessments to evaluate fatherhood, parental bonding, anxious thoughts, and childhood trauma. The study was administered to 242 university students exhibiting social anxiety symptoms. Among the participants, 181 (74.8%) were boys and 61 (25.2%) were girls between the ages of 18 and 29. In terms of educational background, 64.9% of them held a bachelor’s degree, and 35.1% held a master’s degree. A majority of them (84.3%) were of middle-class socio-economic status, 6.6% were of low income, and 9.1% were of high income. Results: Analysis via multiple linear regression revealed that individuals with adverse childhood experiences exhibited heightened levels of social anxiety symptoms (R2 = 0.32) compared to their counterparts without such experiences. Furthermore, fatherhood (R2 = 0.28), paternal bonding (R2 = 0.26), and maternal bonding (R2 = 0.26) were all significantly and equally associated with variance in social anxiety symptoms. The findings underscored the substantial correlation between ACEs, fatherhood, and both maternal and paternal bonding with social anxiety symptoms in adulthood. Conclusions: Accordingly, the study emphasizes the importance of thoroughly assessing the multifaceted contributors to social anxiety. Such insights are pivotal for the design and implementation of community-based preventive interventions aimed at reducing the societal burden of social anxiety disorders.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Breastfeeding – a survey of fathers’ support needs and preferred sources of information
- Author
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Kidane Tadesse Gebremariam, Karen Wynter, Miaobing Zheng, Jonathan Charles Rawstorn, Elizabeth Denney-Wilson, and Rachel Laws
- Subjects
Fathers ,Breastfeeding ,Partner ,Fatherhood ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Fathers can be a critical source of breastfeeding support for their partner, but little is known about what fathers would like to learn about breastfeeding. Partner’s support and encouragement enhances mother’s breastfeeding confidence and boost the capacity to address breastfeeding difficulties effectively. The aims of this study were to explore what fathers regard as important to learn around breastfeeding, and their current and preferred sources of information. Methods A structured online survey was conducted, between September 2022 and November 2022, with fathers containing three sections: (1) sociodemographic variables; (2) perceived importance of 26 breastfeeding topics; and (3) sources of breastfeeding information. A convenience sample of expectant and current fathers aged 18 years or older, who were expecting a baby or had a child aged one year or younger, living in Australia, and able to complete survey in English was recruited. Participants were recruited on Facebook advertisement. Results A total of 174 fathers participated in the study, majority (75%) were aged 30–39 years, current dads (74%), and university educated (69%). The breastfeeding topics that fathers perceived as the most important/ important to learn about were how to work with their partner to overcome breastfeeding challenges, how fathers can be involved with their breastfed baby, the types of support fathers can provide to breastfeeding mothers, what to expect in the first week and the benefits of breastfeeding. The most preferred health professional sources of breastfeeding information were midwives, child and family nurses and doctors. Among non-health professional sources of support, mobile app, friends and family were most popular. Conclusion Breastfeeding information to enhance fathers’ knowledge and awareness of common breastfeeding challenges, and fathers’ role in supporting their breastfeeding partner, appear to be (most) important for fathers. Mobile app appears to be among the most preferred non-health professional ways to provide breastfeeding information to fathers.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The FELLAS (Fathers Empowered to Learn, Lead, & Achieve Success) Fatherhood Project: Pilot Study Results.
- Author
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Young, Michael, Cox, Kevin, Natera, Marielle, Smith, Christopher B., Kittleson, Mark J., Wingard, David, Lam, Shannon, Bermudez, John, and Pineiro, Valerie
- Abstract
Objective: Researchers examined (1) changes in communication, conflict resolution, positive parenting skills, financial management, and 2 measures of employment status among participants in the FELLAS fatherhood program, and (2) whether pretest-posttest changes were maintained at 6-month follow-up. Methods: We recruited fathers to participate in a program designed to help them improve relationships, parenting skills, and make progress toward economic stability. Fathers in the program completed questionnaires prior to the beginning of the program, at the end of the program, and at 6-month follow-up. Some fathers also participated in focus groups. Results: Participants showed statistically significant improvement from pretest to posttest for four of the 6 outcome measures. These changes were maintained at the 6-month follow-up for 2 of the 4 measures. Additionally, the other 2 outcome measures, which did not show significant change from pretest to posttest, did show significant change from pretest to follow-up. Participant feedback from fathers in the focus groups was also positive. Conclusion: These positive results set the stage for a more rigorous evaluation of the intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. SISTEMA DE DERECHO PENAL. PARTE ESPECIAL.
- Author
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DOMINGO JARAMILLO, CRISTINA
- Subjects
- *
PRISON reform , *CRIMINAL law , *CHILD trafficking , *CRIMINAL codes , *ABORTION clinics , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
The article in Cuadernos de Política Criminal reviews the 5th edition of the work "CRIMINAL LAW SYSTEM. SPECIAL PART", highlighting the reforms in the Penal Code, such as harassment of women in abortion clinics and the guarantee of sexual freedom. The direction of Prof. Morillas Cueva and the updating of the work are praised, detailing the reforms and the participation of prominent professors. Crimes such as alteration of paternity, abduction of minors, trafficking of children for illegal adoption, among others, are addressed, analyzing in detail each element of the crime and legislative reforms. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
42. Fathering styles in a traditional culture and its association with marital relationship: A latent profile analysis with a nationally representative sample.
- Author
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Kisbu, Yasemin, Özcan, Meryem Şeyda, Kuşcul, G. Hilal, Bozok, Mehmet, Kaya, Mustafa, and Fişek, Güler
- Subjects
- *
FATHERHOOD , *RESEARCH funding , *CULTURE , *SPOUSES , *PARENTING , *FATHER-child relationship , *FAMILY relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MARITAL satisfaction , *FAMILY structure , *SOCIAL values , *FATHERS , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
This study had two main objectives. The first goal was to examine fathers' parenting styles in a society with traditional patriarchal values. The second goal was to understand the extent to which marital relationship variables (i.e., marital satisfaction and spousal support) are related with the identified fathering profiles. The theoretical and empirical underpinnings of the "parenting styles" literature that form the foundation of the research on parent–child dynamics are still mainly based on data collected only from mothers. This weakness of the literature on fathering typologies is further accompanied by the scarcity of data on fathers' parenting practices from non‐Western contexts. To achieve the study aims, a latent profile analysis based on warmth and control dimensions of parenting was performed using a nationally representative sample of 1070 urban fathers in Turkey. Using scores on six parenting behavior variables (i.e., warmth, punishment, inductive reasoning, positive parenting, discipline and teaching responsibilities, time and talking together), results revealed four fathering profiles: "authoritative" (30%), "average" (45%), "uninvolved" (16%), and "disciplining‐distant" (8%). Furthermore, the results showed that the fathering profiles significantly differed from each other on the marital satisfaction and spousal support scores. Results highlight the importance of investigating fathering behaviors and their predictors in different cultures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Eschatological Faith? Or Faith in Fatherly Providence? Fear and Trembling and the Fatherhood of God.
- Author
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Aroney, Matt
- Subjects
- *
PRESENCE of God , *FATHERHOOD , *DIVINE providence , *GOD , *FAITH - Abstract
Comprehending Fear and Trembling is no small task: the best that can be done is to pull at one thread at a time to slowly illuminate the whole. One such thread is the Fatherhood of God. Kierkegaard gave the pseudonymous Fear and Trembling with his left hand and the Upbuilding Discourses with his right hand. What can we conclude about the interplay between Fear and Trembling and these discourses? One outcome is a movement toward the Fatherhood of God. The anxiety of walking with Abraham to Moriah is supposed to lead the reader to maturely consider what it might mean to live in the world confident of the presence and purpose of God the Father. I propose we see Abraham holding not an "eschatological faith", but a faith in Fatherly providence. Kierkegaard understood his own complex life as held together by the Fatherly kindness of God or God's Governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Nurturing Little Bodies and Brains: Supporting Brain Development, Learning, and Health for Families.
- Author
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CAMPANA, KATHLEEN, BALDINI, MICHELLE, CHUN, JEEYEON, and LOOP, JULIE
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH literacy , *FAMILY health , *FATHERHOOD , *NEURAL development , *SERVICES for caregivers , *LOW-income parents , *MENTAL health services , *COMMUNITY mental health services - Abstract
The article discusses the critical importance of the first years of a child's life for brain development, emphasizing that healthy relationships and early learning experiences significantly influence lifelong health and learning. Topics include the impact of parental education on brain development, the role of public libraries in supporting families, and the disparities faced by underserved communities in accessing resources for early childhood development.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. African American Fathers as a Solution to the Maternal Health Crisis.
- Author
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Alston, Tasha L., Davis, Esa, Rubio, Doris, and Norman, Marie
- Subjects
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AFRICAN Americans , *FATHERHOOD , *EVIDENCE gaps , *MATERNAL health , *PERINATAL period , *AFRICAN American women ,PERINATAL care - Abstract
The research is limited to the role of African American (AA) fathers in maternal health. African American fathers are largely not included in perinatal care, and their contribution may be essential in addressing the Black maternal health disparity crisis. The purpose of this conceptual paper is to examine the evidence of African American fathers involvement in supporting maternal health during the perinatal period. This conceptual paper will summarize research findings and will focus on 1) the evolution of the concept of fatherhood and the role of African American fathers; 2) the extent of African American fathers engagement during the perinatal period; and 3) the potential for African American fathers to play a key role in improving maternal health. Findings from this paper will enhance the evidence base on fathers' involvement in maternal health, highlight the research gaps, and opportunities to focus on African American fathers in addressing maternal morbidity and mortality among African American women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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46. The Impact of Undermining Coparenting on the Mental and Physical Health Outcomes of Black Fathers: The Role of Depression and Restrictive Emotionality.
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Lemmons, Brianna P., Jackson, Matthew C., Coleman, Ailton, O'Gara, Jaimie L., De Veauuse Brown, Natasha, Alston, Tasha L., Tolliver Sr., Corey A., and Rollins, Latrice S.
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BLACK men , *MEN'S health , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *CHILD rearing , *PARENTING , *FATHERHOOD - Abstract
The parenting literature has established the coparenting relationship as central to the parenting behaviors and outcomes of men. The construct of coparenting encompasses supportive efforts among individuals that facilitate the rearing of children and unsupportive actions that can undermine parenting efforts (Merrifield & Gamble, 2013). Few studies have examined undermining coparenting as an experience that shapes Black men's health outcomes. In this study, we apply the social determinants of health framework to examine the impact of Black fathers' perceptions of undermining coparenting on their self-reported ratings of mental and physical health. Using a nationally representative sample of Black men (n = 255), correlational analyses revealed perceptions of undermining coparenting to be a significant predictor of higher levels of anger and poorer perceptions of physical health. These relationships were found to be mediated by depressive symptoms and moderated by restrictive emotionality. It is recommended that the negative impact of undermining coparenting on health be considered as a potential comorbidity contributing to negative health outcomes for Black men. This study adds to the literature on coparenting, Black men's health, and Black fatherhood more generally and urges policymakers and practitioners to consider undermining as an often overlooked, but significant, social determinant of health impacting the well-being of Black men. We also offer recommendations for promoting Black men's health by educating families on the effects of undermining and offering the supports necessary for achieving positive coparenting dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Paternal postnatal depression: prevalence and the associated demographic and maternal reproductive factors among Iranian fathers.
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Yazdanpanahi, Zahra, Mirmolaei, Seyedeh Tahereh, Taghizadeh, Ziba, Jaafarpour, Molouk, and Hajifoghaha, Mahboubeh
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EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale , *CROSS-sectional method , *FATHERHOOD , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *POSTPARTUM depression , *PARENTING , *HUMAN reproduction , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *MEDICAL screening - Abstract
Background: Paternal postnatal depression (PPND) is a critical mental health issue that may harm family members' health and relationships. The Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale (EPDS) is the most common self-reported questionnaire for postnatal depression screening among mothers and fathers worldwide. However, identifying fathers with postnatal depression and determining the related factors have been neglected in some countries. Aims: The present study aimed to determine the prevalence of PPND and then to identify its predictive demographic and reproductive factors. Two cut-off points (10 and 12) for the EPDS were used to detect PPND. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted on 400 eligible fathers selected via multistage sampling. Data were collected using a demographic checklist and the EPDS. Results: None of the participants had previously been screened for PPND. The mean age of the participants was 35.53 ± 5.47 years, and most of them were self-employed and had university degrees. The prevalence of PPND was 24.5% and 16.3% using the EPDS cut-off scores 10 and 12, respectively. An unwanted pregnancy and an abortion history were the predictors of PPND at both EPDS cut-off scores, with gravidity and the number of abortions also being associated with PPND at the cut-off score of 10. Conclusion: In line with the related literature, our results revealed a fairly high prevalence of PPND and its related factors. This indicates the need for a screening program for fathers during the postnatal period to detect and adequately manage PPND and prevent its adverse effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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48. Cumulative childhood interpersonal trauma and parental stress: The role of partner support.
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Bakhos, Gaëlle, Villeneuve, Élise, Bélanger, Claude, Paradis, Alison, Brassard, Audrey, Bergeron, Sophie, and Godbout, Natacha
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RESEARCH funding , *FATHERHOOD , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MOTHERS , *PARENTING , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *FATHERS , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *SOCIAL support , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *MOTHERHOOD , *ADVERSE childhood experiences - Abstract
Parents who have experienced cumulative childhood interpersonal trauma (CCIT, i.e., an accumulation of different types of abuse) tend to experience higher parental stress following the birth of a child. As CCIT is associated with lower levels of partner support, which is linked to increased parental stress, partner support could explain the link between CCIT and parental stress. Yet, these variables have never been studied using a dyadic approach. This study examined the role of received and provided partner support in the association between CCIT and parental stress. A randomly selected sample of 1119 couples with infants completed online questionnaires assessing CCIT, partner support, and parental stress. An actor-partner interdependence model path analysis showed that both parents' CCIT were associated with increased paternal stress through fathers' lower received and provided support, and with increased maternal stress through mothers' received and provided support. Overall, the findings highlight the significance of examining the interdependence between both parents' experience and the role of partner support as a key factor explaining the link between CCIT and parental stress, thereby emphasizing its importance as an intervention target. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Engaged fatherhood and new models of "nurturing care": Lessons learnt from Austria, Italy, Lithuania and Portugal.
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Moura, Tatiana, Mehaffey, Rachel, Lubbock, Annina, Pilinkaite Sotirovic, Vilana, Kirchengast, Anna, do Carmo, Milena, Rolino, Tiago, Deriu, Marco, Santoro, Andrea, Jankauskaite, Margarita, and Mascarenhas, Marta
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SOCIAL services , *DOMESTIC violence , *CONSCIOUSNESS raising , *PARENTS , *VIOLENCE prevention - Abstract
Research on gender‐based violence highlights the need to engage men in prevention work through social change programs that present care as a powerful antidote to violence. Implementation of such programs worldwide provides many examples of how education and support for fathers and fathers‐to‐be can promote healthy masculinities and relationships with an intimate partner and their children. This article aims to explore the findings and lessons learned from the pilot of the European Union‐funded Promotion, Awareness Raising and Engagement of men in Nurture Transformations (PARENT) project (PARENT) which sought to develop and pilot curricula adapted from the internationally tested Program P methodology. The PARENT pilot worked in four European countries to provide training activities for social, educational, and health professionals, as well as education groups for fathers and parents, with the overarching goal of preventing domestic violence through the promotion of engaged fatherhood. By reporting the results from mixed‐methods impact evaluations of pilot programs conducted with professionals and parents, this article discusses how gender‐synchronous father‐focused training can contribute to a shift toward increased positive engagement of fathers during the first 1000 days of a child's life. The article conveys the pilot's promising impact on the knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of professionals and parents, and it examines some of the key contextual factors, limitations, and implementation approaches that plausibly contributed to the PARENT pilot outcomes, with the aim to formulate useful considerations for future scale‐up efforts or the future implementation of similar programs to engage fathers in nurturing care and violence prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Caring masculinities in prison? Social workers and programs dealing with incarcerated fatherhood.
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Cannito, Maddalena and Mercuri, Eugenia
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SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL workers , *FATHERHOOD , *PARENTS , *MASCULINITY , *FATHERS - Abstract
The article explores how fatherhood in prison is conceived and supported by policy intervention in Italy. Despite the fact that, in 2020, 96% of adults detained in Italian prisons were men and half of them had at least one child, fatherhood in prison, a gendered space and institution where masculinities are (re)produced, is an underdeveloped research topic. Adopting a caring masculinity perspective, we focus on incarcerated fatherhood to investigate if and how Italian social programs that deal with incarcerated parents target fathers and, if so, to what extent they promote caring masculinities. To this aim, we will combine an analysis of social programs for incarcerated fathers in Italy, almost entirely run by third sector organizations, with discursive interviews with educators, welfare workers, and third sector stakeholders who participated in the implementation of a project for incarcerated parents in a north Italian prison. The results of our analysis show that involved fatherhood is not only denied to incarcerated men; it is also not allowed in an institution, such as a prison, where domination is the keyword. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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