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This book presents the Maternal Sensitivity Program (MSP), an
eight-session home-delivered intervention designed to enhance
overall maternal sensitivity to infant behavior between the third
and the tenth month of life using video feedback and live modeling
strategies. The intervention was based on successful international
programs but was specifically developed to fit the realities and
needs of low-income countries, whose public health services rely on
scarce human and economic resources. The program aims to promote
maternal acknowledgment of infant mental activity and model
responses that encourage infants' communication of intentions,
needs, desires, and emotions. The first part of the book provides
an overview of core theories related to the concept of maternal
sensitivity, illustrating how it varies across cultural contexts,
and how it is shaped by economic scarcity. The second part of the
book presents evidence of the effectiveness of sensitivity-based
interventions, describes and provides a rationale for the Maternal
Sensitivity Program (MSP), and proposes a framework for training
interventionists seeking to implement the program in different
contexts. The third part of the book presents the intervention
manual, describing in detail the procedures in each of the eight
sessions of the program. The Maternal Sensitivity Program: A Model
for Promoting Infant Development in Challenging Contexts will be an
invaluable resource for developmental psychologists, health care
providers, and social workers who work with families in low-income
countries and in contexts of social vulnerability and need to
implement low-cost interventions to foster healthy child
development.
Shattering Myths on Immigration and Emigration in Costa Rica
provides the first comprehensive examination of transnational
migration patterns into and out of Costa Rica. This impressive
edited volume brings together the work of 18 top scholars from
diverse social science backgrounds to analyze Costa Rican migration
patterns in the era of globalization. The first section focuses on
immigration in Costa Rican history, including chapters on
Nicaraguan, North American and European immigration to the country
as well a chapter on transnational migration within Central
America. The second part centers on the social and political status
of Nicaraguans in Costa Rica that make up a sizable portion of the
working-class similar to Mexican immigrants in the southwestern
United States. The third section of the book analyzes outmigration
of Costa Ricans with chapters on the role of international
remittances sent back to Costa Rica (a major source of income in
contemporary Latin America) and particular migration patterns of
Costa Ricans living in the northeastern United States. The fourth
part of the collection examines the timely topic of gender and
cross-border migration with emphases on women in the actual
migration transit process and the vulnerability of immigrant women
in different industries including agriculture and sex tourism. The
concluding chapters emphasize the social and symbolic images of
immigrants to Costa Rica including the construction of in-group and
out-group identities, the use of symbolic violence and racism
against immigrants. This volume was originally published in Costa
Rica in 2007 and reprinted in 2008 by the University of Costa Rica
Press.
This book presents the Maternal Sensitivity Program (MSP), an
eight-session home-delivered intervention designed to enhance
overall maternal sensitivity to infant behavior between the third
and the tenth month of life using video feedback and live modeling
strategies. The intervention was based on successful international
programs but was specifically developed to fit the realities and
needs of low-income countries, whose public health services rely on
scarce human and economic resources. The program aims to promote
maternal acknowledgment of infant mental activity and model
responses that encourage infants' communication of intentions,
needs, desires, and emotions. The first part of the book provides
an overview of core theories related to the concept of maternal
sensitivity, illustrating how it varies across cultural contexts,
and how it is shaped by economic scarcity. The second part of the
book presents evidence of the effectiveness of sensitivity-based
interventions, describes and provides a rationale for the Maternal
Sensitivity Program (MSP), and proposes a framework for training
interventionists seeking to implement the program in different
contexts. The third part of the book presents the intervention
manual, describing in detail the procedures in each of the eight
sessions of the program. The Maternal Sensitivity Program: A Model
for Promoting Infant Development in Challenging Contexts will be an
invaluable resource for developmental psychologists, health care
providers, and social workers who work with families in low-income
countries and in contexts of social vulnerability and need to
implement low-cost interventions to foster healthy child
development.
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