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Corpus begins with the argument that traditional disciplines are
unable to fully apprehend the body and embodiment and that critical
study of these topics urgently demands interdisciplinary
approaches. The collection's 14 previously unpublished essays
grapple with the place of bodies in a range of twenty-first century
knowledge practices, including trauma, surveillance, aging, fat,
food, feminist technoscience, death, disability, biopolitics, and
race, among others. The book's projected audience includes teachers
and scholars of bodies and embodiment, interdisciplinary scholars
and practitioners, and scholars interested in the any of the
substantive content covered in the book. The collection could be
adopted in courses on the body at advanced undergraduate and
graduate levels, including: cultural studies; queer, gender and
sexuality studies; body and power; biopolitics; intersectional
approaches to the body; anthropology of the body; sociology of the
body; embodiment and space; digital bodies; anthropology of
knowledge production; health, illness, and medicine studies;
science, knowledge, and technology studies; and philosophy and
social theory.
Dramatic societal changes have reshaped America's families. Young
adults have delayed marriage, and cohabitation before marriage has
become commonplace. One in three women giving birth is unmarried,
and the proportion of children under 18 living in single-parent
families rose from 23 to 31 percent between 1980 and 2000,
reflecting increased rates of both nonmarital childbearing and
divorce. This authoritative volume offers a blueprint for
addressing some of the most important measurement issues in family
research, and it points out potential pitfalls for researchers and
students who may not be familiar with data quality issues. The
Handbook of Measurement Issues in Family Research will appeal to
scholars in the departments of psychology, sociology, and
population studies, as well as researchers working in governmental
agencies.
Dramatic societal changes have reshaped America's families. Young
adults have delayed marriage, and cohabitation before marriage has
become commonplace. One in three women giving birth is unmarried,
and the proportion of children under 18 living in single-parent
families rose from 23 to 31 percent between 1980 and 2000,
reflecting increased rates of both nonmarital childbearing and
divorce.
This authoritative volume offers a blueprint for addressing some of
the most important measurement issues in family research, and it
points out potential pitfalls for researchers and students who may
not be familiar with data quality issues.
The "Handbook of Measurement Issues in Family Research "will appeal
to scholars in the departments of psychology, sociology, and
population studies, as well as researchers working in governmental
agencies.
"Work, Family, Health, and Well-Being" grew out of a conference
held in Washington, D.C. in June 2003 on "Workforce/Workplace
Mismatch: Work, Family, Health, and Well-Being" sponsored by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH). The text considers multiple
dimensions of health and well-being for workers and their families,
children, and communities. Investigations into the socioeconomic
gradient in health within broad occupational categories have raised
important questions about the role of specific working conditions
versus the role of conditions of employment such as wages and level
of job security afforded a worker and his/her family in affecting
health outcomes.
Organized into seven parts, this text:
*provides an overview of changes in work and family time and time
use;
*dedicates a section focusing specifically on employers and
workplaces;
*explores disciplinary perspectives on work, family, health, and
well-being;
*focuses on the most studied work and family nexus, the
interrelationship between parental employment, especially maternal
employment and the child's well-being;
*examines gender differences in the division of labor, the effect
of marriage on health, the shifting nature of care-giving
throughout life, and the role of work on various health and
well-being outcomes;
*explores occupational health literature; and
*focuses on the unique work-family issues faced by low-income
families and workers in low-wage jobs.
This book appeals to anyone in the fields of psychology, sociology,
family studies, demographics, economics, anthropology, and social
work.
Welston's second book, the story of a planned powerline from the
coal fields of North Dakota to the Twin Cities and the protests it
brought out.
Corpus begins with the argument that traditional disciplines are
unable to fully apprehend the body and embodiment and that critical
study of these topics urgently demands interdisciplinary
approaches. The collection's 14 previously unpublished essays
grapple with the place of bodies in a range of twenty-first century
knowledge practices, including trauma, surveillance, aging, fat,
food, feminist technoscience, death, disability, biopolitics, and
race, among others. The book's projected audience includes teachers
and scholars of bodies and embodiment, interdisciplinary scholars
and practitioners, and scholars interested in the any of the
substantive content covered in the book. The collection could be
adopted in courses on the body at advanced undergraduate and
graduate levels, including: cultural studies; queer, gender and
sexuality studies; body and power; biopolitics; intersectional
approaches to the body; anthropology of the body; sociology of the
body; embodiment and space; digital bodies; anthropology of
knowledge production; health, illness, and medicine studies;
science, knowledge, and technology studies; and philosophy and
social theory.
From early star myths to the theory of relativity the authors
follow the changing course of man's ideas about motion in the
heavens and on earth. They examine how different men in different
times, viewing the same phenomena, have seen different things and
explained what they saw in vastly different ways.
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