1,579 results on '"life‐course"'
Search Results
2. Childhood neighbourhoods and life‐time fertility in twentieth‐century Southern Sweden: A k‐nearest neighbour approach.
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Souza‐Maia, Vinicius, Dribe, Martin, and Hedefalk, Finn
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HUMAN fertility ,SOCIAL classes ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,CHILDREN in literature ,CHILDLESSNESS ,BIRTH intervals - Abstract
Despite a large literature on the importance of childhood neighbourhoods for life course transitions, there is a lack of fertility studies combining a life‐course perspective with detailed neighbourhood measures. Addressing this gap, we use longitudinal data in which the entire population of a Swedish town is geocoded at the address‐level, 1939–1967, and linked to national registers from 1968 to 2015. We study how social neighbourhoods in childhood influence fertility outcomes by constructing individual neighbourhoods at the address level to measure the social class of nearby childhood neighbours. We analyse the age at first and last birth, children ever born, birth spacing and childlessness. Growing up in higher‐status neighbourhoods is associated with delayed fertility for both men and women, but no association is found for the number of children ever born or for childlessness. Associations are stable over time, and later ages of neighbourhood exposure matter more, especially for men. Contrary to prior literature's focus on the lower classes, our results are driven by higher‐status individuals growing up in distinctly white‐collar neighbourhoods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. The age-graded effect of perceptions of reward and opportunity on offending and desistance.
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Altikriti, Sultan, Connolly, Eric J., and Brown, Wyatt
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YOUNG adults ,TRANSITION to adulthood ,SOCIALIZATION ,ADULTS ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Objectives: This study integrated offending motivation and opportunity to assess (1) whether perceptions of offending rewards and unstructured socialization influence offending; (2) whether unstructured socialization moderates the association between perceptions of rewards and offending; and (3) whether these effects endure across adolescence and into adulthood. Methods: Hierarchical linear modeling was used to assess the relationships between reward perceptions, unstructured socialization, and offending. Latent growth curve modeling was used to assess the age-graded effects. Results: The results suggested that perceptions of offending rewards (β =.110) and unstructured socialization (β =.115) both predicted offending. The interaction of rewards and unstructured socialization predicted offending (β =.078) beyond the independent effects of the rewards and unstructured socialization. Support was mixed for the time-stable interaction effect of these factors on offending, dissipating in emerging adulthood. Conclusions: The results suggest that motivation and opportunity interact to influence offending and therefore should be integrated in future theoretical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Development and vulnerability across the lifecourse.
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Zittoun, Tania, Gillespie, Alex, and Bernal Marcos, Marcos José
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BLOGS , *ADULT development , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distance , *DOMAIN specificity , *JOURNAL writing - Abstract
What is it that develops in adult life? Development through work and family life have been documented and theorised in detail, but much less is known about what is learned beyond these domains, through people's engagements in hobbies or when out of work (e.g., unemployed, retired). We argue that adult development can be addressed in general terms, beyond domain specificity; drawing on our sociocultural psychology framework, and assuming an open-system perspective, we highlight the two processes of progressive differentiation and psychological distancing in diverse domains of activity. To address development over time, we explore 20 years of people's lives through the longitudinal analysis of online diaries. A combination of quantitative and qualitative analysis enables us to identify people's experiences of rupture and transitions, the diversity of their domains of interests, and how these change over time. Based on a case-study, we show that, if the general direction of development does entail progressive differentiation and distanciation, these processes can also be hindered by the cumulation of vulnerabilising events. Finally, we show that some domains, such as the long-standing activity of diary writing, can itself be used as resource for adult development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The effect of parental background on the potential education and employment of migrants' children in Switzerland.
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Le Goff, Jean-Marie, Guichard, Eduardo, Chimienti, Milena, Bolzman, Claudio, and Dasoki, Nora
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CHILDREN of immigrants , *YOUNG adults , *BAYESIAN analysis , *LIFE course approach , *EMPLOYABILITY - Abstract
This paper explores the relations between parental background, the education level reached and the socioprofessional position of children during their transition to adulthood. The paper links segmented assimilation and institutional theories with a life-course approach. It tests three types of mechanisms of the relationship between parental background and children's lifecourse, which are the critical-period model; the path-dependency; and the cumulative-effect model. The paper uses data from the LIVES-FORS cohort panel survey and develops techniques of Bayesian network modelling. The sample is composed of 788 young people educated in Switzerland before the age of 10 with Swiss or non-Swiss origins interviewed five times from 2013 to 2017. The paper provides striking results of path dependency-effect models. It shows no correlation between the geographical origin of the parents and their children's success at school. The professional position of the children of migrants seems only correlated to their educational capital and gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Perspectives in childhood-onset disabilities: integrating 21st-Century concepts to expand our horizons.
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Rosenbaum, Peter L., Imms, Christine, Miller, Laura, Hughes, Debra, and Cross, Andrea
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LIFE course approach , *CHILD development , *WELL-being , *CRITICAL analysis , *NEURAL development - Abstract
AbstractPurposeMaterials and methodsResultsConclusions\nIMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONA powerful aphorism states: “If I hadn’t believed it, I wouldn’t have seen it!” This challenging notion reminds us how strongly we are influenced by prevailing ideas, and how we interpret things according to current fashions and teachings.In this paper we present and discuss contemporary perspectives concerning childhood-onset disability and the evolving nature of how people are thinking and acting. We illustrate these ideas by reminding readers of how we have all traditionally been trained and acculturated to think about many dimensions of neurodevelopmental disability (“What?”); reflect on the impact of these ways of thinking in terms of what we have conventionally “seen” and done (“So What?”); and contrast those traditions with contemporary concepts that we believe or know impact the field (“Now What?”).Many of the concepts discussed here will be familiar to readers. In taking this analytically critical perspective we aim to illustrate that by weaving these individual threads together we are able to create a coherent fabric that can serve children with childhood-onset NDD, their families, service providers, the community, and policy-makers. We do not purport to offer a comprehensive view of the whole field.We encourage readers to consider the integration of these new ways of thinking and acting in our still-evolving field of “childhood-onset disability”.21st-century thinking about childhood-onset neurodisability builds on WHO’s ICF framework for health, expanding well beyond traditional primary biomedical foci on diagnosis and management and toward a focus on functioning and belonging.New emphases put family at the centre, attending to family voices and prioritizing family wellbeing as targets for intervention equal to a focus on the child.There is strong emerging evidence to support the value and impact of these broader approaches on overall family functioning and wellbeing.These developments are primarily conceptual rather than technical: they emphasize child and family development, parenting, promotion of functioning, and a life-course approach from the start of intervention.21st-century thinking about childhood-onset neurodisability builds on WHO’s ICF framework for health, expanding well beyond traditional primary biomedical foci on diagnosis and management and toward a focus on functioning and belonging.New emphases put family at the centre, attending to family voices and prioritizing family wellbeing as targets for intervention equal to a focus on the child.There is strong emerging evidence to support the value and impact of these broader approaches on overall family functioning and wellbeing.These developments are primarily conceptual rather than technical: they emphasize child and family development, parenting, promotion of functioning, and a life-course approach from the start of intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Major depressive disorder as a moderator of the relationship between heavy-episodic drinking and anxiety symptoms.
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Wojciechowski, Thomas W.
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RISK assessment , *SELF-evaluation , *POISSON distribution , *INTERVIEWING , *BRIEF Symptom Inventory , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SEX distribution , *BINGE drinking , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *AGE distribution , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RACE , *LIFE course approach , *SPIRITUALITY , *RELIGION , *ANXIETY disorders , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SOCIAL support , *MENTAL depression , *SOCIAL classes , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADULTS - Abstract
Background: Major depressive disorder and heavy-episodic drinking are risk factors for the development of anxiety. However, the interactive effect between these constructs for predicting anxiety symptoms remains understudied. Aims: This study sought to examine how major depressive disorder moderates the relationship between heavy-episodic drinking frequency and the development of anxiety symptoms in adolescence and emerging adulthood among a sample of justice-involved youth, with expectations that the salience of this relationship may differ based on life-course stage. Methods: Several waves of the Pathways to Desistance study were analyzed. Poisson regression with robust standard errors was used to test the direct and interactive effects of major depressive disorder and heavy-episodic drinking frequency on anxiety symptoms at follow-up in adolescence and emerging adulthood separately. Results: Results indicated that there was a significant negative interaction between major depressive disorder and heavy-episodic drinking frequency for predicting anxiety scores in both adolescence and emerging adulthood, though the results for adolescence were more robust. Conclusions: These results suggest youth without major depressive disorder that engage in heavy-episodic drinking may be a priority population for treating anxiety issues, but that ceiling effects may limit the impact of the behavior on anxiety on youth with major depressive disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Lifetime Upward Economic Mobility and US-Born Latina Women's Preterm Birth Rates.
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Feister, John, Najera, Clarissa, Rankin, Kristin, and Collins, James W
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HISPANIC Americans , *RISK assessment , *RESEARCH funding , *PREMATURE infants , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SMOKING , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PRENATAL care , *METROPOLITAN areas , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *POVERTY , *NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics - Abstract
Objectives: To determine whether Latina women's upward economic mobility from early-life residence in impoverished urban neighborhoods is associated with preterm birth (< 37 weeks, PTB). Methods: Multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed on the Illinois transgenerational birth-file with appended US census income information for Hispanic infants (born 1989–1991) and their mothers (born 1956–1976). Results: In Chicago, modestly impoverished-born Latina women (n = 1,674) who experienced upward economic mobility had a PTB rate of 8.5% versus 13.1% for those (n = 3,760) with a lifelong residence in modestly impoverished neighborhoods; the unadjusted and adjusted (controlling for age, marital status, adequacy of prenatal care, and cigarette smoking) RR equaled 0.65 (0.47, 0.90) and 0.66 (0.47, 0.93), respectively. Extremely impoverished-born Latina women (n = 2,507) who experienced upward economic mobility across their life-course had a PTB rate of 12.7% versus 15.9% for those (n = 3,849) who had a lifelong residence in extremely impoverished neighborhoods, the unadjusted and adjusted RR equaled 0.8 (0.63. 1.01) and 0.95 (0.75, 1.22), respectively. Conclusions for Practice: Latina women's upward economic mobility from early-life residence in modestly impoverished urban neighborhoods is associated with a decreased risk of PTB. A similar trend is absent among their peers with an early-life residence in extremely impoverished areas. Significance: What is Already Known on this Subject?: Robust literature supports a life-course conceptual model of birth outcome. Prior studies have demonstrated associations between upward economic mobility from poverty and decreased rates of preterm birth in non-Latina Black and White women. What this Study Adds?: Upward economic mobility is associated with decreased rates of preterm birth in US-born Latina women. This finding adds context to the life-course conceptual model of birth outcomes and may be salient to understanding the increased risk of adverse birth outcome among US-born (versus foreign-born) Latina women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Introduction
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Constantin, Sandra V., Fossati, Flavia, Series Editor, Ihle, Andreas, Series Editor, Le Goff, Jean-Marie, Series Editor, Sánchez-Mira, Núria, Series Editor, Studer, Matthias, Series Editor, and Constantin, Sandra V.
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- 2024
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10. Introduction—The Importance of Critical Theorizing
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Powell, Jason L., Powell, Jason L., Series Editor, and Chen, Sheying, Series Editor
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- 2024
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11. Examining Parent Criminal History as a Predictor of Recidivism From a Life-course Perspective: Testing for Age-differing Salience in Effects
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Wojciechowski, Thomas
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- 2024
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12. Effects of expanded adverse childhood experiences including school bullying, childhood poverty, and natural disasters on mental health in adulthood
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Natsu Sasaki, Kazuhiro Watanabe, Yoshiaki Kanamori, Takahiro Tabuchi, Takeo Fujiwara, and Daisuke Nishi
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Maltreatment ,Depression ,Anxiety ,Life-course ,Public health ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The study aimed to examine the association of expanded adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) with psychological distress in adulthood. The data from nation-wide online cohort was used for analysis. Community dwelling adults in Japan were included. The ACEs was assessed by 15 items of ACE-J, including childhood poverty and school bullying. Severe psychological distress was determined as the score of Kessler 6 over 13. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was conducted, by using sample weighting. A total of 28,617 participants were analyzed. About 75% of Japanese people had one or more ACEs. The prevalence of those with ACEs over 4 was 14.7%. Those with ACEs over 4 showed adjusted odds ratio = 8.18 [95% CI 7.14–9.38] for severe psychological distress. The prevalence of childhood poverty was 29% for 50–64 year old participants and 40% of 65 or older participants. The impact of childhood poverty on psychological distress was less than other ACEs in these age cohorts. Bullying was experienced 21–27% in young generations, but 10% in 65 or older participants. However, the impact on psychological distress in adulthood was relatively high in all age groups. ACEs have impacted mental health for a long time. Future research and practice to reduce ACEs are encouraged.
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- 2024
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13. Effects of expanded adverse childhood experiences including school bullying, childhood poverty, and natural disasters on mental health in adulthood.
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Sasaki, Natsu, Watanabe, Kazuhiro, Kanamori, Yoshiaki, Tabuchi, Takahiro, Fujiwara, Takeo, and Nishi, Daisuke
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POOR children , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *SCHOOL bullying , *MENTAL health , *ADULTS , *AGE groups - Abstract
The study aimed to examine the association of expanded adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) with psychological distress in adulthood. The data from nation-wide online cohort was used for analysis. Community dwelling adults in Japan were included. The ACEs was assessed by 15 items of ACE-J, including childhood poverty and school bullying. Severe psychological distress was determined as the score of Kessler 6 over 13. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was conducted, by using sample weighting. A total of 28,617 participants were analyzed. About 75% of Japanese people had one or more ACEs. The prevalence of those with ACEs over 4 was 14.7%. Those with ACEs over 4 showed adjusted odds ratio = 8.18 [95% CI 7.14–9.38] for severe psychological distress. The prevalence of childhood poverty was 29% for 50–64 year old participants and 40% of 65 or older participants. The impact of childhood poverty on psychological distress was less than other ACEs in these age cohorts. Bullying was experienced 21–27% in young generations, but 10% in 65 or older participants. However, the impact on psychological distress in adulthood was relatively high in all age groups. ACEs have impacted mental health for a long time. Future research and practice to reduce ACEs are encouraged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The social foundations of racial inequalities in arrest over the life course and in changing times.
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Sampson, Robert J. and Neil, Roland
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RACIAL inequality , *MULTIPLE birth , *SOCIAL history , *ARREST , *COHORT analysis - Abstract
Although racial disparities in criminal justice contact are long‐standing and the subject of continuing public debate, few studies have linked early‐life social conditions to racial disparities in arrest over the life course and in changing times. In this article, we advance and test a theoretical model of racial inequality in long‐term arrest histories on a representative sample of nearly 1,000 individuals from multiple birth cohorts in the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. Large Black–White disparities in arrests from ages 10 to 40 arise from racial inequalities in exposure to cumulative childhood advantages and disadvantages rather than from race‐specific effects. Smaller but meaningful Hispanic–White gaps follow a similar pattern, and the same explanations of racial disparities hold across different offense types and across birth cohorts who came of age at different times during 1995 to 2021. These findings indicate that inequalities in early‐life structural factors, which themselves are historically shaped, trigger processes of cumulative advantage and disadvantage that produce racial disparities in arrests over the life course and that persist across different points in contemporary history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The End of the Age-Crime Curve? A Historical Comparison of Male Arrest Rates in the United States, 1985–2019.
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Tuttle, James
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ARREST , *TEENAGERS , *ADULTS , *CRIMINOLOGY , *CRIMINAL behavior - Abstract
As presented in this article, the overall arrest rate for males in the United States no longer peaks during the late teenage years, contrary to the traditional conceptualization of the age-crime curve. Instead of peaking around age 18 and falling throughout adulthood, the overall arrest rate in 2019 did not peak until age 27. Using a dissimilarity index, the results show that the age-crime curve for overall, violent and property offenses during 2019 differs significantly from that of 1985. However, the age-crime curve is still apparent within the data when examined by birth cohort. It appears that a sudden decline in the proportion of offenses committed by 15-to-19-year-old males is responsible for the shift in the aggregate/cross-sectional age-crime curve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Overweight‐years and cancer risk: A prospective study of the association and comparison of predictive performance with body mass index (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study).
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Hawwash, Nadin K., Sperrin, Matthew, Martin, Glen P., Joshu, Corinne E., Florido, Roberta, Platz, Elizabeth A., and Renehan, Andrew G.
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BODY mass index ,DISEASE risk factors ,ATHEROSCLEROSIS ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Excess body mass index (BMI) is associated with a higher risk of at least 13 cancers, but it is usually measured at a single time point. We tested whether the overweight‐years metric, which incorporates exposure time to BMI ≥25 kg/m2, is associated with cancer risk and compared this with a single BMI measure. We used adulthood BMI readings in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study to derive the overweight‐years metric. We calculated associations between the metric and BMI and the risk of cancers using Cox proportional hazards models. Models that either included the metric or BMI were compared using Harrell's C‐statistic. We included 13,463 participants, with 3,876 first primary cancers over a mean of 19 years (SD 7) of cancer follow‐up. Hazard ratios for obesity‐related cancers per standard deviation overweight‐years were 1.15 (95% CI: 1.05–1.25) in men and 1.14 (95% CI: 1.08–1.20) in women. The difference in the C‐statistic between models that incorporated BMI, or the overweight‐years metric was non‐significant in men and women. Overweight‐years was associated with the risk of obesity‐related cancers but did not outperform a single BMI measure in association performance characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Juvenile Violent Victimization and Adult Criminal Outcomes: The Role of Military Service as a Turning Point in Young Adulthood.
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Orak, Ugur, Soileau, Christine, Harter, Jessica, Dobson, Claire, and Huey Dye, Meredith
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LIFE change events , *VIOLENCE , *CRIME , *IMPRISONMENT , *RESEARCH funding , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SELF-control , *CRIME victims , *LONGITUDINAL method , *EXPERIENCE , *MILITARY service , *LIFE course approach , *TRANSITIONAL programs (Education) , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL support , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *MENTAL depression , *NEIGHBORHOOD characteristics , *CHILDREN , *ADULTS - Abstract
Previous research has consistently shown that juvenile violent victimization is associated with an increased risk of future criminal involvement, a phenomenon commonly known as victim-offender overlap. Despite a growing interest in the factors underlying this overlap, potential roles of major life transitions and turning points that may interrupt and reshape the nature of this developmental association have garnered less academic attention. Analyzing nationally representative data from waves I, IV, and V of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health; n = 10,205), this study investigates the association between juvenile violent victimization and adult criminal outcomes (i.e., violent offending, non-violent offending, arrest, and incarceration) and whether this association is moderated by military service with and without combat experience in young adulthood. Employing a series of logistic regression analyses and adjusting for a host of covariates, measures of selection, and criminogenic traits, we found that juvenile violent victimization was significantly associated with greater odds of violent offending, arrest, and incarceration in adulthood. Among individuals with violent victimization histories, military service with no combat experience was associated with a 16% decrease in the odds of incarceration in adulthood. Combat experience, however, was associated with over seven times greater odds of violent offending in adulthood for these individuals. These findings have important implications for theory, research, and practice, and highlight the relevance of life transitions and turning points in general, and military service in particular, in mitigating or perpetuating the criminogenic impacts of violent victimization in the life course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Heterogeneity in the risk of cardiovascular disease mortality after the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy across mothers' lifetime reproductive history.
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Wyatt, Sage, Kvalvik, Liv Grimstvedt, Singh, Aditi, Klungsøyr, Kari, Østbye, Truls, and Skjærven, Rolv
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REPRODUCTIVE history , *MOTHERS , *HYPERTENSION , *MEDICAL registries , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality - Abstract
Background: Prior studies on maternal cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) have focused only on a woman's first birth and have not accounted for successive affected pregnancies. Objectives: The objective of this study is to identify mothers' risk of CVD mortality considering lifetime reproductive history. Methods: We used data from the Medical Birth Registry of Norway, the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry, and the Norwegian National Population Register to identify all mothers who gave birth from 1967 to 2020. Our outcome was mothers' CVD death before age 70. The primary exposure was the lifetime history of HDP. The secondary exposure was the order of HDP and gestational age at delivery of pregnancies with HDP. We used Cox regression models to estimate hazard ratio (HR) and 95% confidence interval (CI), adjusting for education, mother's age, and year of last birth. These models were stratified by the lifetime number of births. Results: Among 987,378 mothers, 86,294 had HDP in at least one birth. The highest CVD mortality, relative to mothers without HDP, was among those with a pre‐term HDP in their first two births, although this represented 1.0% of mothers with HDP (HR 5.12, 95% CI 2.66, 9.86). Multiparous mothers with term HDP in their first birth only had no increased risk of CVD relative to mothers without HDP (36.9% of all mothers with HDP; HR 1.12, 95% CI 0.95, 1.32). All other mothers with HDP had a 1.5‐ to 4‐fold increased risk of CVD mortality. Conclusions: This study identified heterogeneity in the risk of CVD mortality among mothers with a history of HDP. A third of these mothers are not at higher risk compared to women without HDP, while some less common patterns of HDP history are associated with severe risk of CVD mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Oral Histories and Futures: Researching crises across the life‐course and the life‐course of crises.
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Hall, Sarah Marie
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REPRODUCTION , *ORAL history , *CRISES , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
This paper showcases Oral Histories and Futures interviews as an approach and series of innovations for researching crises with qualitative methods. It presents new possibilities for methodological innovations to embrace the multi‐directional and longitudinal temporalities of crises across the life‐course and the life‐course of crises. As an exciting avenue for methodological enhancement, I build on and bring together techniques across Oral Histories and creative biographical interviewing. Developed as part of a recent study exploring reproduction, economic crisis and the life‐course, with this approach I aimed to elicit people's experiences and opinions about their pasts, present and futures by innovating with traditional qualitative methodologies. I outline five areas of innovation—and associated observations, opportunities and obstacles—including a focus on younger generations, on the future, the inclusion of reflexive activities, interviewing in the midst of crises, and remote interviewing. Conclusions highlight what can be learned from an Oral Histories and Futures approach for thinking about socio‐temporal horizons. This paper presents new possibilities for qualitative methodologies to embrace the multi‐directional and longitudinal temporalities of crises across the life‐course and the life‐course of crises. I outline five areas of innovation—and associated observations, opportunities and obstacles—including a focus on younger generations, on the future, the inclusion of reflexive activities, interviewing in the midst of crises, and remote interviewing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. How and where does "care" fit within seminal life-course approaches? A narrative review and critical analysis.
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Lawless, Michael T., Tieu, Matthew, Golley, Rebecca, and Kitson, Alison
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LIFE , *HEALTH self-care , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *MEDICAL care , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PATIENT-centered care , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *LIFE course approach , *HEALTH equity , *WELL-being - Abstract
Aims: To map the concepts of the caring life-course theory that are used in life-course approaches from different disciplines; establish whether there is a common recognition of, or language used, to describe care in those life-course approaches; and identify the role and contribution of care to the life-course literature. Design: This discursive paper uses a narrative review process to explore points of convergence and divergence between life-course approaches and the caring life-course theory. Methods: Categories for analysis were developed deductively and inductively, focusing on the constructs of fundamental care, capacity and capability, care network, care transition, care trajectory and care biography. Results: We identified four disciplinary perspectives: (1) life-course sociology; (2) life-course epidemiology; (3) lifespan developmental psychology; and (4) life-course health development. While six core constructs of the caring life-course theory were described, either explicitly or implicitly, in existing life-course approaches, no single approach fully describes the role and contribution of care across the lifespan. Conclusion: Life-course approaches have largely neglected the contribution and role of care in informing the life-course discourse. This review highlights the significance of care beyond traditional healthcare settings and recognizes it as a fundamental human need for well-being and development, which can contribute to existing lifecourse literature. Implication for the Profession and/or Patient Care: There is a need to understand care as a complex system and embrace a whole-system, life-course approach to enable nurses and other healthcare professionals to provide high-quality, patient-centred care. Impact: Incorporating care within a life-course approach provides opportunities to integrate and deliver care centred around the person, their life transitions, trajectories and care networks, including informal carers and healthcare professionals. No Patient or Public Contribution: Patients or members of the public were not involved in this study as it is a discursive paper based on the relevant literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Is lifetime abuse forgivable in old age?
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Band-Winterstein, Tova, Shulyaev, Ksenya, and Eisikovits, Zvi
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CHILD abuse & psychology ,FORGIVENESS ,ABUSE of older people ,SECONDARY analysis ,INTERVIEWING ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,DOMESTIC violence ,LIFE course approach ,AGING ,RESEARCH methodology ,DATA analysis software ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,HOPE ,OLD age - Abstract
Old age is characterized by reflection and a retrospective examination of the multiple meanings of various life experiences, including lifelong abuse. Forgiveness is found to have a salutary effect, especially for older adults. To understand the place and role of forgiveness in the reflective process during aging, we performed a secondary analysis of in-depth, semi-structured interviews (N = 78) with older women survivors of abuse. Inductive thematic analysis was based on concepts developed deductively from the literature review. The findings include three main themes: (1) The dimensions of forgiving: The victim as subject; (2) Being forgiven: Between lost forgiveness and hope; and (3) Self-forgiveness and the aging self. Despite the known salutary effect of forgiveness, we must consider that this is not a universally desirable process. We included the dimension of forgiveness in the study of abuse throughout the older person's life course and identified further complexities in addition to the "forgiveness"/"unforgiveness." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. LifeCourse Socioeconomic Position and Ideal Cardiovascular Health in Hispanic/Latino Adults of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos
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Paola Filigrana, Jee‐Young Moon, Linda C. Gallo, Lindsay Fernández‐Rhodes, Krista M. Perreira, Martha L. Daviglus, Bharat Thyagarajan, Olga L. Garcia‐Bedoya, Jianwen Cai, Xiaonan Xue, Robert C. Kaplan, Shakira Suglia, and Carmen R. Isasi
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cardiovascular health ,childhood ,Hispanic ,Latino ,life‐course ,social mobility ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background The Hispanic/Latino population experiences socioeconomic disadvantages across the lifespan. Yet, little is known about the role of these disadvantages in cardiovascular health (CVH). We assessed the association of lifecourse socioeconomic position (SEP) with ideal CVH and change in Hispanic/Latino adults. Methods and Results We used longitudinal data from the HCHS/SOL (Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos). Childhood SEP was determined using parental educational attainment. Adult SEP was determined through an index combining participants' education, occupation, income, and assets at baseline. We classified participants into 4 socioeconomic mobility categories (eg, stable low or high SEP, upward or downward mobility). Using the 4 health factors of the American Heart Association “Life's Essential 8,” we built a score of ideal CVH at baseline and the 6‐year follow‐up. Linear mixed‐effects models using inverse probability weighting were fitted to assess the main associations. Higher childhood SEP was associated with higher ideal CVH at baseline (β for high school versus high school versus
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- 2024
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23. Student loan debt and family formation of youth in Japan.
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Wang, Jie, Akabayashi, Hideo, Kobayashi, Masayuki, and Sano, Shinpei
- Abstract
Since the late 1990s, the number of college student loan debtors has increased rapidly in Japan. Despite the uniqueness of Japanese higher education policies in terms of tuition levels and heavy reliance on educational loans rather than grants, few studies have focused on the influence of student loans on adult youths’ lives. This study is the first to provide a detailed analysis of the relationship between student loan debt and youth life events. We explored the impact of student loan debt on family formation, using a data set of college graduates collected in 2017. We employed survival analysis methods to understand the relationship between student loan debt and marital decisions, and negative binomial models to analyze the impact of this debt on childbearing. The results showed that 2-year college graduate women with student loan debt were more likely to delay marital decisions than women without student loan debt. Taking out student loans also had a negative correlation to childbearing, which was also stronger for 2-year college graduate women. In conclusion, this study revealed that the Japanese government’s reliance on student loans has unexpected consequences. Even following recent reforms, student loan debt continues to be a major financial burden for young Japanese people and is likely to negatively affect family formation in Japan, which has already seen a decline in marriage and fertility rates over the last few decades. Our results call for additional policies to mitigate the negative influence of the Japanese college student aid system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Adventure in the social world: Georg Simmel's appeal to a theory of creative action.
- Author
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Lafontaine, Simon
- Subjects
- *
ACTION theory (Psychology) , *IMAGINATION , *ADVENTURE & adventurers , *CULTURE , *PRODUCTIVE life span , *EVERYDAY life - Abstract
Reconstructing the logic of everyday action between reproduction and invention of forms is a growing concern in contemporary debates on the praxeological foundation of sociology. This article argues for a renewed understanding of action in its contingency and creativity. Building on current developments on the role of projectivity and imagination in the emergence of the new and unexpected in action, it turns to Simmel's undervalued essay "The Adventure" to examine a style of conduct characterized by deviation from predicable patterns and background assumptions in everyday life. To understand the emergent properties and intrinsic complexity of creative action, one must consider the philosophical discoveries of Simmel concerning the form of adventure in the subjective flow of time. The adventure is elaborated as an action involving curiosity, unfamiliar detours, and a sense of presentness as striking features that benefit insights from his later work on life's transcendence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
25. From Sequences to Variables: Rethinking the Relationship between Sequences and Outcomes.
- Author
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Helske, Satu, Helske, Jouni, and Chihaya, Guilherme K.
- Subjects
- *
PANEL analysis , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *SEQUENCE analysis , *REGRESSION analysis , *INDEPENDENT variables , *SIMILARITY (Psychology) - Abstract
Sequence analysis is increasingly used in the social sciences for the holistic analysis of life-course and other longitudinal data. The usual approach is to construct sequences, calculate dissimilarities, group similar sequences with cluster analysis, and use cluster membership as a dependent or independent variable in a regression model. This approach may be problematic, as cluster memberships are assumed to be fixed known characteristics of the subjects in subsequent analyses. Furthermore, it is often more reasonable to assume that individual sequences are mixtures of multiple ideal types rather than equal members of some group. Failing to account for uncertain and mixed memberships may lead to wrong conclusions about the nature of the studied relationships. In this article, the authors bring forward and discuss the problems of the "traditional" use of sequence analysis clusters as variables and compare four approaches for creating explanatory variables from sequence dissimilarities using different types of data. The authors conduct simulation and empirical studies, demonstrating the importance of considering how sequences and outcomes are related and the need to adjust analyses accordingly. In many typical social science applications, the traditional approach is prone to result in wrong conclusions, and similarity-based approaches such as representativeness should be preferred. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The magnitude and direction of the relationship between risk factor and cognition depends on age: a pooled analysis of 5 community-based studies.
- Author
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Meirelles, Osorio, Arnette, Anthony, Guðnason, Vilmundur, and Launer, Lenore J.
- Subjects
AGE factors in cognition ,DIASTOLIC blood pressure ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,SYSTOLIC blood pressure ,BODY mass index - Abstract
The mixed evidence of the association between high levels of cardiovascular risk factors (CVRF) and the risk for cognitive impairment may be due to confounding of age across studies. We pooled and harmonized individual-level data (30,967 persons, age range 42–96 years) from five prospective cohorts to investigate by 1 year age increments to investigate whether or not there is change in slope describing the association of CVRF to a cognitive outcome (Digit Symbol Substitution Test; DSST). The CVRF included: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, fasting glucose and body mass index. Linear and quadratic piecewise regression models were fit to the trajectory patterns of these slopes (betas). The pattern of yearly slope changes showed higher CVRF were associated with lower DSST, but associations attenuated toward zero as age increased for all but DBP where 1 year slopes for DBP changed direction from negative to positive from mid- to late-age. Age is not only a driver of cognitive decline—age also modifies the direction and strength of the association of cognitive function to CVRF and cohort age may be one reason why the evidence for CVRF-CD association is mixed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ticket to ride: national and international mobility as a multi-faceted resource in the life courses of young Italian graduates.
- Author
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Grüning, Barbara and Camozzi, Ilenya
- Subjects
- *
GRADUATES , *MOBILITY (Structural dynamics) , *CAREER development , *EMPIRICAL research , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
This paper looks at the national and international geographic mobility paths of young graduates in Italy and their educational and professional trajectories. By departing from the research fields of youth studies, mobility studies and higher education studies, we aim to highlight the multiple meanings and effects that mobility experiences may have in structuring graduates' future projects and/or desires. On the other hand, we argue that their expectations for both their mobility experiences and careers are also shaped by family socialisation, considering furthermore that the building of embodied and scholastic cultural capitals is spatially differentiated depending on the places where they grow up. The empirical research is based on two rounds of semi-narrative interviews conducted with 51 Italian graduates between 2020 and 2021. For the analysis, we have outlined four types of mobility paths. For each type, we focus on how socio-structural and cultural variables influence the ways the interviewees framed their mobility and professional experiences, desires and projects, focusing furthermore on how the Covid-19 pandemic differently affected their objective possibilities and strategies of mobility between the first and second waves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The relationship between mistrust and aggression from childhood to adulthood.
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Rotenberg, Ken J. and Fonseca, António Castro
- Subjects
- *
CHILD Behavior Checklist , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *SUSPICION , *ADULTS , *LIFE course approach - Abstract
The study examined the relationship between mistrust and aggression from childhood to adulthood. The participants resided in Portugal and were tested during middle childhood (Mage = 7.5, SD = 0.81 years, n = 445, 240 male), preadolescence (Mage = 11.92, SD = 0.96 years, n = 431, 200 male), mid‐adolescence (Mage = 14.70, SD = 0.91 years, n = 326, 201 male), late adolescence (Mage = 18.14, SD = 1.19 years, n = 410, 216 male), and adulthood (Mage = 26.56, SD = 1.13, years, n = 417, 197 male). Mothers reported the participants' mistrust during childhood and preadolescence on items from the Child Behavior Checklist. Aggression was assessed by standardized self‐report measures at each age period. It was found that mistrust was associated with aggression during preadolescence and predicted changes in aggression to mid‐adolescence and adulthood. The findings supported the conclusion that mistrust during preadolescence predisposes individuals to show aggression later in the life course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Association of life–course severe sleep apnoea with the risk of all-cause mortality: the offset effect of physical activity.
- Author
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Lin, Jing, Yang, Rongrong, Zhang, Yuan, Li, Shu, Yang, Hongxi, Ma, Yue, Li, Huiping, Zhou, Lihui, Hou, Yabing, and Wang, Yaogang
- Subjects
MORTALITY risk factors ,MORTALITY prevention ,LIFESTYLES ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,AGE distribution ,REGRESSION analysis ,PHYSICAL activity ,RISK assessment ,SEVERITY of illness index ,SEX distribution ,SLEEP apnea syndromes ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXERCISE intensity ,HEALTH behavior ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Objectives: The detrimental association of mortality with sleep apnoea may increase with apnoea severity. To assess the association between life-course severe sleep apnoea and all-cause mortality and to investigate whether and to what extent the association was compensated by physical activity. Methods: The prospective cohort study included 407,128 individuals (mean age 56.26 years) from the UK Biobank. Severe sleep apnoea was defined as hospital admission. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) was measured from frequency per week and duration per day via self-report. Cox proportional hazards regression models were performed to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: A total of 29,004 death (7.1%) events occurred (median of follow-up 12.7 years). The multi-adjusted HRs (95% CIs) of all-cause mortality were 1.57 (1.12–2.21) for early-life severe sleep apnoea, 1.30 (1.16–1.46) for mid-life severe sleep apnoea, and 2.75 (1.31–5.77) for early- to mid-life severe sleep apnoea, respectively. In joint effect analysis, compared to participants with an inactive level of physical activity and mid-life severe sleep apnoea, the HR (95% CI) of all-cause mortality was 0.57 (0.44–0.74) in those with sufficient physical activity and mid-life severe sleep apnoea. For physical activity intensity, a medium proportion of vigorous physical activity (VPA) per week buffered 56% impacts of mid-life severe sleep apnoea on all-cause mortality (HR = 0.44; 95% CI, 0.31–0.64). Conclusions: Not only mid-life severe sleep apnoea but also early-life severe sleep apnoea is positively associated with all-cause mortality. MVPA could compensate for the risk of all-cause mortality in relation to mid-life severe sleep apnoea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. How unique are terrorist suspects? Investigating similarities and differences between terrorist suspects, their siblings, and other suspects.
- Author
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Thijs, Fabienne, Rodermond, Elanie, Kleemans, Edward, and van de Weijer, Steve
- Subjects
SOCIAL bonds ,TERRORISTS ,SIBLINGS ,CRIMINAL records ,CRIMINOLOGICAL theory ,CRIME suspects - Abstract
This article contributes to the debate in terrorism research on how unique terrorist suspects (i.e. individuals suspected of crimes with terrorist intent) actually are and whether or not specific theories are necessary to explain their behavior. Our study compares terrorist suspects from the Netherlands with their siblings and nonterrorist suspects to find out whether and how terrorist suspects are unique. Inspired by criminological theories involving social bonds, regression analyses were conducted utilizing registry data on household compositions, socio-economic status (SES), and criminal histories. A key finding is that terrorist suspects seem to have more in common with other suspects than with their siblings; besides prior criminal involvement, no significant differences were found between terrorist suspects and other suspects. Terrorist suspects were significantly less often married, had a lower SES, and were more often previously suspected of crimes as compared to their siblings. Particularly, lacking employment is a differentiating factor for terrorist suspects and siblings. Our findings stress the necessity to investigate in-depth under what circumstances and how a disadvantaged background (e.g. lack of social bonds, criminal history) can lead to becoming a terrorist suspect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Out the Gate: Towards a Rhizomatic Understanding of Methamphetamine Use in Aotearoa-New Zealand.
- Author
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Bax, Trent
- Subjects
- *
METHAMPHETAMINE - Abstract
As part of an interview-based qualitative study on the life-course of people who formally used methamphetamine in Aotearoa-New Zealand, this paper uses Deleuze and Guattari's rhizomatic perspective to trace the specific effects and particular relations involved in methamphetamine use. The methamphetamine-using trajectory for the 42 former users is a multifaceted and constantly fluctuating process involving multiple entries, exists, pathways, and restarts. By amplifying and enlightening the user, methamphetamine use begins by liberating desire through sending the user "out the gate," but long-term high-dose use can end up constraining and repressing subjectivity and cyclically producing adverse psychological, emotional, interpersonal, and social effects. As a metamorphic process that produces transformative change, long-term high-dose methamphetamine use is a nonlinear rollercoaster ride that typically leads to a downward spiral whereby life stagnates, shrinks, or regresses. By undermining productive and transformative connections, the life of the long-term high-dose methamphetamine user typically—but not inevitably—involves revolving instead of evolving. Against a linear and deterministic popular media-generated narrative about methamphetamine use, a rhizomatic perspective emphasizes the potential for transformation by focusing upon the situational and interactional processes involved in users who undergo complex and varied temporary changes. From Deleuze and Guattari's perspective, disentangling from long-term high-dose methamphetamine use requires activating new relationships and possibilities for desire by forming meaningful biopsychosocial connections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Life-Course Brain Health as a Determinant of Late-Life Mental Health: American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry Expert Panel Recommendations.
- Author
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Eyre, Harris A., Stirland, Lucy E., Jeste, Dilip V., Reynolds III, Charles F., Berk, Michael, Ibanez, Agustin, Dawson, Walter D., Lawlor, Brian, Leroi, Iracema, Yaffe, Kristine, Gatchel, Jennifer R., Karp, Jordan F., Newhouse, Paul, Rosand, Jonathan, Letourneau, Nicole, Bayen, Eleonore, Farina, Francesca, Booi, Laura, Devanand, Devangere P., and Mintzer, Jacobo
- Abstract
• What is the critical role of life course brain health in shaping mental well-being during the later stages of life? This position statement of the Expert Panel on Brain Health of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry (AAGP) emphasizes the critical role of life course brain health in shaping mental well-being during the later stages of life. • What is the main finding of this study? We advocate for a holistic approach that integrates medical, psychological, and social frameworks with culturally tailored interventions across the lifespan to promote brain health and overall mental well-being in old age across all communities. • What is the meaning of the finding? This position statement emphasizes the intrinsic link between brain health and late-life mental health, urging healthcare professionals, policymakers, and a broader society to prioritize comprehensive strategies that safeguard and promote brain health from birth through old age across all communities. This position statement of the Expert Panel on Brain Health of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry (AAGP) emphasizes the critical role of life course brain health in shaping mental well-being during the later stages of life. Evidence posits that maintaining optimal brain health earlier in life is crucial for preventing and managing brain aging-related disorders such as dementia/cognitive decline, depression, stroke, and anxiety. We advocate for a holistic approach that integrates medical, psychological, and social frameworks with culturally tailored interventions across the lifespan to promote brain health and overall mental well-being in aging adults across all communities. Furthermore, our statement underscores the significance of prevention, early detection, and intervention in identifying cognitive decline, mood changes, and related mental illness. Action should also be taken to understand and address the needs of communities that traditionally have unequal access to preventive health information and services. By implementing culturally relevant and tailored evidence-based practices and advancing research in geriatric psychiatry, behavioral neurology, and geroscience, we can enhance the quality of life for older adults facing the unique challenges of aging. This position statement emphasizes the intrinsic link between brain health and mental health in aging, urging healthcare professionals, policymakers, and a broader society to prioritize comprehensive strategies that safeguard and promote brain health from birth through later years across all communities. The AAGP Expert Panel has the goal of launching further activities in the coming months and years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Dietary patterns from mid-through later-life in relation to sarcopenia risk over 20 years among Chinese community-dwelling oldest old individuals.
- Author
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Bai, Anying, Xu, Weihao, Liang, Yuanfeng, Jiang, Yu, and Lin, Zhanyi
- Abstract
Evidence regarding how dietary patterns (DPs) from mid- (60 years old) to later-life (over 80 years old) affect sarcopenia risk in old age is scarce. We included 7267 participants aged ≥80 years from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey in 2018. The Simplified Healthy Eating Index (SHE index) based on nine dietary variables was used to measured DPs and changes in DPs, with a higher score indicating better diet quality. The term "Mid-life" DPs denoted dietary habits at the age of 60 whereas "Later-life" DPs referred to dietary habits acquired over 80 years old. Sarcopenia risk was evaluated using the SARC-CalF questionnaire. We applied multivariable adjusted logistic regression models to investigate the cross-sectional association between DPs in a life course and sarcopenia risk in 2018 after adjusting for potential confounders including sociodemographic characteristics, lifestyle risk factors, and unfavorable health conditions. Several sensitivity analyses were conducted to verify the robustness of the results. We found that healthier DPs during both mid- and later-life were associated with a decreased odds of sarcopenia risk, with adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of 0.69 (95 % confidence interval [CI]: 0.54–0.88) and 0.84 (95 % CI: 0.71–0.99), respectively. The odds of sarcopenia risk were also decreased among those with healthier DPs over a period of 20 years (OR = 0.80, 95 % CI: 0.69–0.93). For each nutrient consumption, participants who had high-quality fish consumption both in mid- and later-life had a 23 % decreased odds of sarcopenia risk (OR = 0.77, 95 % CI: 0.67–0.88) compared with those who had low-quality fish consumption all the time. The results were largely unchanged in sensitivity analyses. Our findings highlight the importance of maintaining healthy dietary habits throughout life to reduce the risk of sarcopenia in old age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Securing Retirement Through Intra-European Migration: Older Romanian Women's Transnational Struggle for Formal Social Protection.
- Author
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Kussy, Angelina and Mingot, Ester Serra
- Abstract
Copyright of Migraciones is the property of Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Instituto Universitario de Estudios sobre Migraciones and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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35. A New-Materialist Reading of Disability, Senescence, and the Life-Course.
- Author
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Flynn, Susan and Feely, Michael
- Subjects
AGING ,MATERIALISM ,SOCIAL justice ,LIFE course approach ,SCHOLARS - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to provide a new-materialist theoretical commentary on disability, senescence, and the life-course. A critical literature review with deductive thematic analysis was undertaken using an electronic database search strategy. For analysis, theoretical conventions of newmaterialism were deductively applied to literature. New-materialism offers an approach taken by disability studies scholars within critical disability studies and elsewhere. A hallmark of the approach is attempting to return to the focus traditionally given in disability theory to physical and material aspects of disability. This would include complex issues such as exploring the corporeality of impairment and what embodied selfhood means. The central argument is that new-materialism and critical disability studies can effectively illuminate the relationship between disability, senescence and the life-course. To substantiate this claim, we apply new-materialist theory to discuss various dimensions of disability, such as impairment and social justice, relevant to the end phase of the life-course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Resistance Strategies and Identity Reappropriation of LGBTQ+ Migrants in Québec.
- Author
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Chbat, Marianne, Pagé, Geneviève, Côté, Isabel, and Blais, Martin
- Subjects
LGBTQ+ people ,EMPLOYMENT ,HOUSING ,RACISM ,HETEROSEXISM ,HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
The realities of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) migrants and racialized people are complex, due to the violence and/or invisibilization they may have experienced, both in their country of origin and in the land of establishment (Chehaitly etal., 2021; Roy, 2013). Some have been forced to leave their country of origin because of heteronormative and cisnormative violence, because of political violence or because of unsafe social and legal environments. However, once in Québec, they face new challenges such as professional disqualification, search of employment and housing, and regulation of their migratory status. Thus LGBTQ+ migrant and racialized individuals are faced with major challenges and may experience forms of increased stigmatization (Chbat & Chamberland, 2021). Based on an intersectional theoretical framework that recognizes the intersecting systems of oppression such as racism, cissexism, and heterosexism, this article presents the results of a qualitative research that examined the unique journeys of 21 LGBTQ+ migrants and racialized people who participated in the UNIE-LGBTQ survey (SSHRC-2016-2023), the largest partnership research ever conducted in Québec on the experiences of inclusion and exclusion encountered by LGBTQ+ communities. In addition to presenting the multiple challenges faced by these individuals, this article will also highlight the resistance and resilience strategies shared by them, namely their implication in community-based resources and their critical narrative towards the dominant normative discourse on the coming-out and the visibility of sexuality. Finally, this article will propose some recommendations for practice to reflect on concrete measures that could improve the living conditions of these multimarginalized people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Corrigendum: Rethinking immunization programs through the life course approach
- Author
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Evelyn Balsells, Margherita Ghiselli, Carolina Hommes, Beatriz Nascimento Lins de Oliveira, Ana Lucía Rosado-Valenzuela, and Enrique Vega
- Subjects
life-course ,vaccination ,immunization ,immunosenescence ,IA2030 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Parents, Children, and the Third Age: The Needs of the Elderly
- Author
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Boggi Cavallo, Pina, Cesaro, Michele, Valsiner, Jaan, Series Editor, Marsico, Giuseppina, editor, and Tateo, Luca, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Cognitive Reserve: A Life-Course Perspective
- Author
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Wang, Rui, Dekhtyar, Serhiy, Wang, Hui-Xin, Manto, Mario, Series Editor, and Petrosini, Laura, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Introduction to Criminal Careers
- Author
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Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., Jolliffe, Darrick, Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., and Jolliffe, Darrick
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Introduction: Perspectives on Health and Social Care
- Author
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Powell, Jason, Chen, Sheying, Series Editor, Powell, Jason L., Series Editor, and Powell, Jason
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Theory, methods, and operational results of the Young Womens Health History Study: a study of young-onset breast cancer incidence in Black and White women.
- Author
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Velie, Ellen, Marcus, Lydia, Pathak, Dorothy, Hamilton, Ann, DiGaetano, Ralph, Klinger, Ron, Gollapudi, Bibi, Houang, Richard, Carnegie, Nicole, Olson, L, Nuru-Jeter, Amani, Zhang, Zhenzhen, Modjesk, Denise, Norman, Gwendolyn, Lucas, Darek, Gupta, Sapna, Rui, Hallgeir, and Schwartz, Kendra
- Subjects
Breast cancer ,Epidemiology ,Health status disparities ,Life-course ,Premenopause ,Young-onset breast cancer ,Adult ,Black or African American ,Breast Neoplasms ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,White People ,Young Adult - Abstract
PURPOSE: The etiology of young-onset breast cancer (BC) is poorly understood, despite its greater likelihood of being hormone receptor-negative with a worse prognosis and persistent racial and socioeconomic inequities. We conducted a population-based case-control study of BC among young Black and White women and here discuss the theory that informed our study, exposures collected, study methods, and operational results. METHODS: Cases were non-Hispanic Black (NHB) and White (NHW) women age 20-49 years with invasive BC in metropolitan Detroit and Los Angeles County SEER registries 2010-2015. Controls were identified through area-based sampling from the U.S. census and frequency matched to cases on study site, race, and age. An eco-social theory of health informed life-course exposures collected from in-person interviews, including socioeconomic, reproductive, and energy balance factors. Measured anthropometry, blood (or saliva), and among cases SEER tumor characteristics and tumor tissue (from a subset of cases) were also collected. RESULTS: Of 5,309 identified potentially eligible cases, 2,720 sampled participants were screened and 1,812 completed interviews (682 NHB, 1140 NHW; response rate (RR): 60%). Of 24,612 sampled control households 18,612 were rostered, 2,716 participants were sampled and screened, and 1,381 completed interviews (665 NHB, 716 NHW; RR: 53%). Ninety-nine% of participants completed the main interview, 82% provided blood or saliva (75% blood only), and SEER tumor characteristics (including ER, PR and HER2 status) were obtained from 96% of cases. CONCLUSIONS: Results from the successfully established YWHHS should expand our understanding of young-onset BC etiology overall and by tumor type and identify sources of racial and socioeconomic inequities in BC.
- Published
- 2021
43. Securing Retirement Through Intra-European Migration: Older Romanian Women’s Transnational Struggle for Formal Social Protection
- Author
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Angelina Kussy and Ester Serra Mingot
- Subjects
intra-european migration ,older migrants ,transnational ageing ,pensions ,transnational social protection ,gender and class inequalities ,life-course ,Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration ,JV1-9480 - Abstract
This article explores through qualitative methods how structural inequalities and weak welfare states push women to migrate in their old age to piece together their pension across different countries. Based on in-depth interviews, observations, and ethnographic conversations conducted with Romanian women in Spain, it explores how they navigate the European Union’s (UE) law on Social Security to aggregate social insurance periods from the work performed in different member states and therefore get entitled to a state pension. We analyze how the accumulation of vulnerabilities (related to class, gender, age, and ethnicity) shape the trajectories of these aging women in a context of structurally unequal welfare systems. The paper thus contributes to the transnational social protection field with a timely focus on old age formal arrangements within the EU and use of life-course approach to understand the reasons of related with social protection older migrant’s im/mobilities.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Associations of crying, sleeping, and feeding problems in early childhood and perceived social support with emotional disorders in adulthood
- Author
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Julia Jaekel, Kati Heinonen, Nicole Baumann, Ayten Bilgin, Riikka Pyhälä, Christian Sorg, Katri Räikkönen, and Dieter Wolke
- Subjects
Regulatory problems ,Life-course ,Clinical diagnoses ,Anxiety disorder ,Mood disorder ,Social support ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Multiple or persistent crying, sleeping, or feeding problems in early childhood (regulatory problems) are associated with increased internalizing symptoms in adulthood. Unknown is whether early regulatory problems are associated with emotional disorders in adulthood, and what psychosocial factors may provide protection. We tested whether early childhood multiple or persistent regulatory problems are associated with a higher risk of (a) any mood and anxiety disorder in adulthood; (b) perceiving no social support in adulthood; and (c) whether social support provides protection from mood and anxiety disorders among participants who had multiple/persistent regulatory problems and those who never had regulatory problems. Methods Data from two prospective longitudinal studies in Germany (n = 297) and Finland (n = 342) was included (N = 639). Regulatory problems were assessed at 5, 20, and 56 months with the same standardized parental interviews and neurological examinations. In adulthood (24–30 years), emotional disorders were assessed with diagnostic interviews and social support with questionnaires. Results Children with multiple/persistent regulatory problems (n = 132) had a higher risk of any mood disorder (odds ratio (OR) = 1.81 [95% confidence interval = 1.01–3.23]) and of not having any social support from peers and friends (OR = 1.67 [1.07–2.58]) in adulthood than children who never had regulatory problems. Social support from peers and friends provided protection from mood disorders, but only among adults who never had regulatory problems (OR = 4.03 [2.16–7.94]; p = .039 for regulatory problems x social support interaction). Conclusions Children with multiple/persistent regulatory problems are at increased risk of mood disorders in young adulthood. Social support from peers and friends may, however, only provide protection from mood disorders in individuals who never had regulatory problems.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Rethinking immunization programs through the life course approach
- Author
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Evelyn Balsells, Margherita Ghiselli, Carolina Hommes, Beatriz Nascimento Lins de Oliveira, Ana Lucía Rosado-Valenzuela, and Enrique Vega
- Subjects
life-course ,vaccination ,immunization ,immunosenescence ,IA2030 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The world continues to undergo a profound demographic shift toward increasing longevity –but quality of life is not improving correspondingly. At the same time, countries are taking stock of the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on national immunization programs. The pandemic exacerbated the declines in vaccination coverage for multiple vaccine-preventable diseases (VPD). To ensure that all persons receive all the vaccines for which they are eligible, it is time to consider how applying a life course approach (LCA) to immunization programs can help reinvigorate and redesign actions for greater vaccine uptake. In this mini review, we present the key concepts and principles of the LCA as applied to national immunization programs. Also, we offer recommendations on how health systems can achieve regional and national goals to ensure all people receive the recommended vaccine doses at every stage of life, thus ensuring the greatest benefits for individuals and societies.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Social exclusion and its impact on health over the life course: A realist review protocol [version 2; peer review: 2 approved]
- Author
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Sarah Parker, Clíona Ní Cheallaigh, Chris O'Donnell, Rikke Siersbaek, John Ford, and Sara Burke
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Health outcomes ,Social exclusion ,Marginalisation ,Deprivation ,Poverty ,Life-course ,eng ,Medicine - Abstract
Background Social exclusion is a process whereby certain individuals are born into or pushed to the margins of society and prevented from participating in social, cultural, economic, and political life. People who experience social exclusion are not afforded the same rights and privileges as other population groups. Socially excluded people often experience poorer outcomes in a variety of domains including health, education, employment, and housing than people with socio-economic privilege. People experiencing social exclusion frequently have higher and more complex health needs and poorer access to healthcare than the general population. The aim of this study is to better understand and explain how social exclusion occurs and how it impacts health over the life course. Methods A realist review will be undertaken. Data will be collected via a systematic search of databases of peer-reviewed literature and further iterative searches of peer-reviewed and other literatures as needed. The following data bases will be searched: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, and ASSIA, using both indexed subject headings in each database and relevant key words. Grey literature will be searched via Google Scholar and relevant websites of organisations that work with populations affected by social exclusion. Conclusion A realist review will be conducted to explain the underlying societal mechanisms which produce social exclusion and related health outcomes in particular contexts affecting excluded population groups across the life course. The study has the potential to inform policy makers and service managers of how and why social exclusion occurs and potential key intervention points to prevent exclusion from happening.
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- 2023
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47. Exploring the Role of Psycho-Social Factors on the Recidivism of Homicide Offenders.
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Reid, Jonathan C., Oliveira, Raquel V., and Collier, Nicole
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MURDERERS , *HOMICIDE , *CRIMINAL justice system , *CRIMINOLOGY , *RECIDIVISM - Abstract
Research on criminal recidivism is extensive. However, little is known about how cumulative risk factors influence recidivism, specifically among homicide offenders. The current study examines the effect of cumulative psychological and social risk factors on recidivism patterns for homicide offenders released in Florida between 2004 and 2011. Analyses of 4,323 homicide offenders indicate that the influence of cumulative psycho-social risk factors varies depending on the measure of recidivism and the statistical method used. The implications of these findings for theory and research are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. The critical temporalities of serial migration and family social reproduction in Southeast Asia.
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Yeoh, Brenda S.A., Lam, Theodora, Somaiah, Bittiandra Chand, and Acedera, Kristel Anne Fernandez
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SOCIAL reproduction , *FAMILY structure , *FAMILY reunification , *PARENTAL leave , *FAMILIES - Abstract
The prevailing neoliberal labour migration regime in Asia is underpinned by principles of enforced transience: the overwhelming majority of migrants – particularly those seeking low-skilled, low-waged work – are admitted into host nation-states on the basis of short-term, time-bound contracts, with little or no possibility of family reunification or permanent settlement at the destination. As families go transnational, 'family times' become inextricably intertwined with the 'times of migration' (Cwerner, 2001). In this context, for many migrant-sending families in Southeast Asian source countries such as Indonesia and the Philippines, parental migration as a strategy for migrating out of poverty or for socio-economic advancement requires the left-behind family to resiliently absorb the uncertainties of parental leaving and returning. Based on research on Indonesian and Filipino rural households (studied from 2008 through 2017) including paired life-story interviews with parental/non-parental adult carers and children, the article investigates the crucial links between the time construct of seriality in migration on the one hand, and the temporal structure of family based social reproduction on the other. It first focuses on how serial migration produces, and is produced by, spiraling needs and expanding aspirations, hence creating its own momentum for continuity. The paper then explores how competing temporal logics create difficult choices for migrants, leading to the recalibration of priorities within constrained resources. By drawing attention to the co-existence of and contradictions between multiple temporalities in the lives of migrants and their families, a critical temporalities framework yields new insights in understanding the social reproduction of families in a migratory context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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49. Out of prison, out of crime? The complex interplay between the process of desistance and severe resource disadvantages in women's post-release lives.
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Rodermond, Elanie, Van De Weijer, Steve, Rosenkrantz Lindegaard, Marie, Bijleveld, Catrien C. J. H., Slotboom, Anne-Marie, and Kruttschnitt, Candace
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SOCIAL control ,SOCIAL influence ,CRIME ,SOCIAL capital ,INDIVIDUAL differences ,WOMEN criminals - Abstract
We examine the influence of social capital, subjective changes and post-release resource disadvantages on women's desistance and reentry pathways. Using a sample of 1478 formerly incarcerated women, we estimate logistic hybrid random-effects models to assess the influence of several factors on offending during a 7-year follow-up period. We use interviews with a subsample of women to explore the mechanisms underlying the quantitative findings. Results show that the effect of often-studied forms of social control are to a large degree dependent on (unmeasured) individual differences and circumstances, such as pre- and post-incarceration adversities, and the quality of forms of social control. A desire to desist from crime is often blocked by severe resource advantages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. Association between psychological distress trajectories from adolescence to midlife and mental health during the pandemic: evidence from two British birth cohorts.
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Moulton, V., Sullivan, A., Patalay, P., Fitzsimons, E., Henderson, M., Bann, D., and Ploubidis, G. B.
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STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *MID-life crisis , *MENTAL health , *EPIDEMICS , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *SECONDARY analysis , *LONGITUDINAL method , *POISSON distribution - Abstract
Background: This paper examined whether distinct life-course trajectories of psychological distress from adolescence to midlife were associated with poorer mental health outcomes during the pandemic. Methods: We present a secondary analysis of two nationally representative British birth cohorts, the 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS) and 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS70). We used latent variable mixture models to identify pre-pandemic longitudinal trajectories of psychological distress and a modified Poisson model with robust standard errors to estimate associations with psychological distress, life satisfaction and loneliness at different points during the pandemic. Results: Our analysis identified five distinct pre-pandemic trajectories of psychological distress in both cohorts. All trajectories with prior symptoms of psychological distress irrespective of age of onset, severity and chronicity were associated with a greater relative risk of poorer mental health outcomes during the pandemic and the probability of poorer mental health associated with psychological distress trajectories remained fairly constant. The relationship was not fully attenuated when most recent pre-pandemic psychological distress and other midlife factors were controlled for. Conclusions: Whilst life-course trajectories with any prior symptoms of psychological distress put individuals at greater risk of poor mental health outcomes during the pandemic, those with chronic and more recent occurrences were at highest risk. In addition, prior poor mental health during the adult life-course may mean individuals are less resilient to shocks, such as pandemics. Our findings show the importance of considering heterogeneous mental health trajectories across the life-course in the general population in addition to population average trends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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