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This volume utilizes the emergent adulthood framework to further
our understanding of marginalized youth in contemporary societies.
Using data from a longitudinal study named Risky Business, the
authors outline the fundamental characteristics of emerging
adulthood through the lens of stories of street-involved youth.
These stories inform an understanding of the powerfulness of
emerging adulthood theory as a "process;" in particular, they
illustrate emerging adults' view of adulthood as comprised of a)
accepting responsibility for oneself, b) making independent
decisions, and c) becoming financially independent. Further,
street-involved youth experience and practice emerging adulthood,
and then adulthood, unusually early and under unusual conditions.
By examining this developmental process, the book makes a valuable
contribution to research on the causes and consequences of the
early onset of adulthood, the experience of instability in emerging
adulthood, and the importance of social institutions' presence or
absence during this period of life.
This collection brings together the leading research in maternity
care from the United States, Canada and Europe to discuss systems
of care for pregnancy and childbirth. The essays focus on the
practical side of "good" social science and "feminist-friendly"
research. The text not only looks at maternity, but also the act of
childbirth, with the goal of providing not just comparative
perspectives of care, but also to integrate the differences in care
within each essay for a truly international understanding of
maternity care.
This book is a collection of original essays on the meaning of providing care. These essays address not only the work of caring for the elderly, but also the work of caring for children, the infirm and those with disabilities. The essays approach the topic from an ethical standpoint and also from a more practical, feminist and sociological point of view. The main goal of this book is to re-conceive the notion of care work, beginning with steps as simple as replacing the phrase 'caregiver' with the phrase 'care worker'.
Efforts to apply ethical guidelines and regulations to vulnerable
populations are often problematic. Consequently, health and social
scientists sometimes shy away from the challenges of research,
particularly when it means addressing value-laden social problems
such as sexuality, drugs, and racism. Ethical Issues in
Community-Based Research with Children and Youth is a collection of
essays that describe the uniqueness of community-based research,
outlining several of the ethical concerns that it engenders. The
contributors examine such issues as the scope of informed consent
to multiple stakeholders, determining competence to give consent in
marginalized populations, and managing dual roles as participant
researchers. The collection suggests that a more collaborative,
ongoing, and discursive approach is needed by researchers and by
ethical review boards to ensure that research on sensitive social
problems with high risk populations is supported and also conducted
with a clear understanding of the highest ethical standards
possible.
Offers state-of-the-art analyses of the new midwifery Midwifery in
the developed world is in a state of ferment and change - a
phenomenon referred to as the new midwifery. Reconceiving Midwifery
offers state-of-the-art analyses of the new midwifery as it is
practiced. The authors - social scientists and midwifery
practitioners - reflect on regional differences in the emerging
profession, providing a systematic account of its historical,
local, and international roots, its evolving regulatory status, and
the degree to which it has been integrated into health care
systems.
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