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FAMILIES (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   115714


Billboards, youth, unemployment and superstition in Mamfe-Akuap / Ayesu, Ebenezer   Journal Article
Ayesu, Ebenezer Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract On a sunny day in May 1983 a section of the youth of Mamfe-Akuapem in south-eastern Ghana - reeking heavily of alcohol and marijuana, armed with machetes and pick-axes and angrily singing war songs, drumming and dancing - went to the residence of Nana Ama Ansaa Sasraku III, their queen mother. Their mission was very simple. They were to inform her of their plans to demolish the billboard which welcomed motorists and visitors on their arrival in the town. According to them, the billboard was inhabited by an evil spirit responsible for the general incidence of unemployment and the absence of development in the town.
Key Words Remittances  Families  Traditional  Opportunities  Queenmother  Widespread 
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2
ID:   163677


Center on Children & Families / King, Shani M   Journal Article
King, Shani M Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The University of Florida Levin College of Law Center on Children and Families addresses the instability many children face due to a wide range of challenges. They include poverty, violence, and the criminalization of youth of color. They also include inadequate health care, substandard educational opportunity, and the general failure of systems designed to support, protect, and treat children who are classified as dependent, delinquent, or otherwise in need. The Center's model rests on five premises that Professor Barbara Woodhouse and colleagues identified in their scholarship as essential for addressing crises rather than mitigating symptoms: curriculum, scholarship, conferences, advocacy, and clinics. Over the years, the Center has held numerous conferences to advance groundbreaking, practical research on family law and children's rights and has held youth summits in connection with those conferences to engage with youth on relevant legal issues. These efforts remain at the conceptual heart/core of the Center's work.
Key Words Families  Center on Children 
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3
ID:   107663


Different and unequal? breadwinning, dependency deferments, and / Geva, Dorit   Journal Article
Geva, Dorit Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract With establishment of the U.S. Selective Service System in 1917, selective draft rules placed consideration of registrants' economic obligations to their dependents front and center. By observing the Canadian and British recruitment experiences, American policy makers opted against universal conscription since they believed it would be costly because of the need to offer family allowances and opted against a voluntary system since they believed that too many bachelors would fail to volunteer. Dependency deferments were designed to minimize the social and economic costs of war. Local board members determined whether a man was a genuine breadwinner or not, and individual discretion on this matter contributed to the higher rates of African American draftees during WWI compared to white draftees, since African American men were less likely to be recognized as genuine breadwinners. Selective Service rules thus resulted in reproducing female citizens as economic dependents and yielded durable inequalities among registrants.
Key Words Race  Gender  Draft  Conscription  Families  Caregiving 
African American  Selective Service System  WWI  Dependency Deferments  Breadwinning 
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4
ID:   095690


House of tow families / Samandar, Rami   Journal Article
Samandar, Rami Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Families  House 
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5
ID:   078475


Transnationalism through the life course: Hong Kong immigrants in Canada / Kobayashi, Audrey; Preston, Valerie   Journal Article
Kobayashi, Audrey Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract Transnationalism needs to be understood as a set of practices fashioned through the life course as well as in relation to contextual factors that include state policy and experiences of discrimination that affect entry to the labour force. The paradox of transnationalism is that families make strategic decisions to separate in order to maintain family unity and to advance the welfare of children. Emigrants from Hong Kong to Canada in the latter decades of the twentieth century were motivated by concern for family welfare and the quality of education in Canada. Yet economic livelihood prospects remained greater in Hong Kong than in Canada, prompting many families to become transnational `astronaut' families with one or more members working in Hong Kong. Migration decisions tend to occur around key points of life-course transition involving entry to and graduation from education, and entry to and exit from the labour force. Transnational practices are complex and multigenerational, involving different patterns for young adults, those in their middle years and the elderly.
Key Words Migration  Hong Kong  Canada  Families  Trnsnationalism 
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