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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social groups & communities > Age groups > Adults > General
The process of aging is receiving an increasing amount of attention
from behavioral scientists. "Middle Age and Aging" is an attempt to
organize and select from the proliferation of material available in
this field. The selections in this volume emphasize some of the
major topics that lie closest to the problem of what social and
psychological adaptations are required as individuals move through
the second half of their lives. Major attention is paid to the
importance of age-status and age-sex roles; psychological changes
in the life-cycle; social-psychological theories of aging;
attitudes toward health; changing family roles; work, retirement,
and leisure; certain other dimensions of the immediate social
environment such as friendships, neighboring patterns, and living
arrangements; differences in cultural settings; and perspectives of
time and death.
Contemporary research on major emotional disorders emphasizes their
commonalities rather than their differences. This research
continues to lend support for a unified transdiagnostic approach to
treatment of these disorders that considers their commonalities and
is applicable to a range of emotional problems. Unified Protocol
for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders provides an
alternative to disorder-specific treatments of various emotional
disorders, designed to be applicable to the wide range of anxiety
and other disorders with strong emotional components. The Therapist
Guide and accompanying client Workbook present an eight-module
therapy program that puts substantial emphasis on emotion-focused
approaches, helping clients confront and experience challenging
emotions while teaching them how to regulate those emotions.
Expanded considerably in this second edition, the volume provides
guidance on using the Unified Protocol (UP) to address problems not
only with anxiety, but also with depression, eating disorders,
non-suicidal self-injury, substance use, and anger. Treatment
procedures have been further elucidated and more guidance is
provided to practitioners on how to present key treatment concepts.
Chapters brand new to this updated edition introduce functional
assessment and describe how to provide the UP in a group format,
while patient materials have been revised, streamlined, and made
more user-friendly.
Despite decades of efforts to combat homelessness, many people
continue to experience it in Canada's major cities. There are a
number of barriers that prevent effective responses to
homelessness, including a lack of agreement on the fundamental
question: what is homelessness? In Multiple Barriers, Alison Smith
explores the forces that shape intergovernmental and multilevel
governance dynamics to help better understand why, despite the best
efforts of community and advocacy groups, homelessness remains as
persistent as ever. Drawing on nearly 100 interviews with key
actors in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal, as well as
extensive participant observation, Smith argues that institutional
differences across cities interact with ideas regarding
homelessness to contribute to very different models of governance.
Multiple Barriers shows that the genuine involvement of locally
based service providers, with the development of policy, are
necessary for an effective, equitable, and enduring solution to the
homelessness crisis in Canada.
Our years between 45 and 65 are no longer a time for decline into
old age. Ideally, once the awareness of our 40th 50th or 60th
birthday hits, or the last child leaves home, a number of new
opportunities arise, allowing us to savor what we have accomplished
so far, create new directions, explore where we fit in the larger
scheme of things, and determine what we ultimately want from our
lives. In Finding Meaning, Facing Fears: Living Fully Twixt Midlife
and Retirement, clinical psychologist Jerrold Lee Shapiro invites
you to re-envision this unique time in your life and discover
opportunities to stretch in your capacities, face and conquer old
demons, and meet new challenges with fresh resources. Dr. Shapiro
will help you discover which alternatives will best serve your
relationships, career goals, personal growth objectives, and even
spiritual quests. The text offers answers to inevitable life
questions like: "Is that all there is?" "Where do I go from here?"
"Is it too late to change my life?" "Why aren't I happier?" The
book features real-life vignettes from 45-65-year old women and men
who are exceedingly open and honest about their lives. Thoughtful
and empowering, Finding Meaning, Facing Fears offers fresh
perspective on a previously uncharted life transition.
Research skills are as critical to social work practitioners as
skills in individual and group counselling, policy analysis, and
community development. Adopting strategies similar to those used in
direct practice courses, this book integrates research with social
work practice, and in so doing promotes an understanding and
appreciation of the research process. This second edition of
Practising Social Work Research comprises twenty-three case studies
that illustrate different research approaches, including
quantitative, qualitative, single-subject, and mixed methods. Six
are new to this edition, and examine research with First Nations,
organizing qualitative data, and statistics. Through these
real-life examples, the authors demonstrate the processes of
conceptualization, operationalization, sampling, data collection
and processing, and implementation. Designed to help the student
and practitioner become more comfortable with research procedures,
Practising Social Work Research capitalizes on the strengths that
social work students bring to assessment and problem solving.
Like the Green Revolution of the 1960s, a "Blue Revolution" has
taken place in global aquaculture. Geared towards quenching the
appetite of privileged consumers in the global North, it has come
at a high price for the South: ecological devastation, displacement
of rural subsistence farmers, and labour exploitation. The
uncomfortable truth is that food security for affluent consumers
depends on a foundation of social and ecological devastation in the
producing countries. In Confronting the Blue Revolution, Md Saidul
Islam uses the shrimp farming industry in Bangladesh and across the
global South to show the social and environmental impact of
industrialized aquaculture. The book pushes us to reconsider our
attitudes to consumption patterns in the developed world,
neoliberal environmental governance, and the question of
sustainability.
Despite acute labour shortages during the Second World War,
Canadian employers--with the complicity of state
officials--discriminated against workers of African, Asian, and
Eastern and Southern European origin, excluding them from both
white collar and skilled jobs. Jobs and Justice argues that, while
the war intensified hostility and suspicion toward minority
workers, the urgent need for their contributions and the
egalitarian rhetoric used to mobilize the war effort also created
an opportunity for minority activists and their English Canadian
allies to challenge discrimination.Juxtaposing a discussion of
state policy with ideas of race and citizenship in Canadian civil
society, Carmela K. Patrias shows how minority activists were able
to bring national attention to racist employment discrimination and
obtain official condemnation of such discrimination. Extensively
researched and engagingly written, Jobs and Justice offers a new
perspective on the Second World War, the racist dimensions of state
policy, and the origins of human rights campaigns in Canada.
What happens when the church finds itself clinging to beliefs and
following lifestyles that clash with its surrounding culture? We
become "aliens," "strangers," and outcasts in the eyes of the
prevailing culture. Peter gives timeless, practical advice to
Christians who refuse to cave in to the social pressures to conform
to the world's thinking and behavior. John W. Smith carefully
examines the texts of First and Second Peter in their original
contexts and challenges today's Christian to stand strong in the
face of mistreatment and even persecution. Our path from earthly
life to heavenly reward is not without its hardships. In every
generation, there will be those whose only way home is through the
fires of adversity. With God's guidance those fires will not
consume us, but will instead refine us for His kingdom. Christians
are a people refined by fire. John W. Smith has more than fifty
years experience as a preacher, teacher, and lectureship speaker.
He has sold more than 1.4 million copies of his books, including
"My Mother Played the Piano, My Mother's Favorite Song, " and the
"Restoration Church " series. His speaking and writing reveal an
unusual insight into life and God's Word.
What is it like to become an adult in twenty-first-century America?
This book takes us to four very different places - New York City,
San Diego, rural Iowa, and Saint Paul, Minnesota - to explore the
dramatic shifts in coming-of-age experiences across the country.
Drawing from in-depth interviews with people in their twenties and
early thirties, it probes experiences and decisions surrounding
education, work, marriage, parenthood, and housing. The first study
to systematically explore this phenomenon from a qualitative
perspective, "Coming of Age in America" offers a clear view of how
traditional patterns and expectations are changing, of the range of
forces that are shaping these changes, and of how young people
themselves view their lives.
Scholars continue to study the origins of fundamentalist religion
in the twentiethcentury. The importance of this study is evident to
all who would seek to understand the complex political and
religious currents influencing the modern world. This study focuses
on the emergence of Protestant fundamentalism in Los Angeles,
beginning with late nineteenthcentury trends toward religious
radicalism and culminating in the splitting of radical and moderate
fundamentalist groups at the Bible Institute of Los Angeles in the
late 1920s. Highlighted in this study are the complex tensions
between mainline Protestants and an emerging sectarian trend among
those who would become militant fundamentalists, which continues to
shape Protestant religion today.
This book focuses on the lives and experiences of young people in
Africa. On agents who, willingly or unwillingly, see themselves as
belonging to the socio-generational category of youth and the ways
in which they seek to shape and unfold their lives in a positive
manner. Rather than seeing youth as either a social or cultural
entity in itself, or as a predefined life-stage, the book argues
for an exploration of how youth position themselves and are
positioned within generational categories. In studying young
people, social scientists must conceptualise youth as both social
being and social becoming; a position in movement. It is from the
duality of being positioned and seeking one's own
socio-generational position that this book engages in the debate on
contemporary African youth.The chapters are based on ethnographic
research across the African continent and provide in-depth analyses
of the perceptions, positions, possibilities, and practices of
diverse groups of young people. The book will be of value to
scholars and students of African studies and social science
interested in this major, yet marginalized, social category in
contemporary Africa.
For undergraduate courses in Adulthood and Aging, Gerontology, and
Adult Development. This text provides an engaging perspective on
the issues, challenges, and joys of adult development and aging. It
provides a balanced and integrated treatment of young, middle, and
later adulthood, concluding with a discussion of life satisfaction
and quality of life issues. More than ever there is a need to
inform those who will be therapists, health care professionals,
social workers, and all others who plan to work with adults in some
capacity of the challenges and opportunities that often come our
way in adulthood. In addition, this text covers areas which are
often neglected, such as self development and individual
differences, life-long learning, community and political life, and
values and moral development. The addition of these and other
topics, along with a positive-growth focused perspective sets this
book apart from other textbooks in this area that have grown out of
gerontology backgrounds with a focus on physical decline and
illness. The pedagogical features of the book direct students to
key information, and the special features engage the reader in
current ethical dilemmas and life-planning issues.
Unmarried at 40 could there be anything worse? Our culture dictates
that women who have failed to catch or hold the golden ring of
marriage are destined to be deprived and depressed, perhaps even
dangerous. Add the burden of age and you have a woman headed for
disaster. Not necessarily so, say the authors of Flying Solo, who
talked with never-married, divorced, and widowed women in midlife
across the country. These women's stories offer blueprints for
living, as well as inspiration, for other women "flying solo." Most
of these women did not intend to be single at midlife. Yet they
have given up the dream of "happily ever after" to create lives on
their own that are rich and rewarding. The authors share these
women's stories as well as their practical advice on managing the
mechanics of being single, transforming loneliness, redefining the
place of work, developing friendship and support networks, living
with and without intimacy and sex with men, and choosing to have
and raise children. In the process they define not just a new
American lifestyle but a new American Dream."
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