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Academic Journals
- 110
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From:Resources for Feminist Research (Vol. 32, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedFebruary 6, 2005. The memorial celebration for Jeri Wine is being held in Room 2-214 of the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), the building where we once worked together. I find a seat in the large,...
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From:American Journal of Psychology (Vol. 117, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedImagination inflation occurs when people increase their confidence that an event actually happened after imagining the details of the event. The purpose of this study was to determine whether warning people about the...
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From:Social Work (Vol. 44, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedRecently, researchers in several different fields have discovered that people who have experienced seriously adverse events frequently report that they were positively changed by the experience. Respondents in these...
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From:Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine (Vol. 27, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Asylum-seekers from Africa immigrate to Israel through the Sinai desert and are often exposed to traumatic events. Objective To identify the scope and types of medical services required by...
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From:Africa (Vol. 80, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT In Akropong-Akwapim, south-eastern Ghana, memories of a sorrowful or conflict-laden past are accessed by verbal and visual strategies that are allusive in nature. The name-response that a mother gives to her...
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From:Currents in Theology and Mission (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSeveral years ago, our family gathered in St. Louis for a reunion. Before their arrival, I had opportunity to spend some time in the library of Concordia Seminary, where I have studied. I was especially interested in...
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From:Journal of Family Issues (Vol. 19, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSamples of widowed and divorced women drawn from public death and divorce records and matched on age, race, and median income of census tract of residence were used to test Engel and Lin's (1991) counteractive model of...
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From:The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (Vol. 31, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedStudies that use short-run analyses of demographic variables to understand historical populations have gained predominance during the last two decades, particularly in the context of developed countries. Short-term...
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From:Psychiatric Times (Vol. 32, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedRabbi Harold Kushner said, "God is like a mirror. The mirror never changes, but everyone who looks into it sees something different." The same can be said for grief. On the heels of the third major death of a family...
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From:The Literary Review (Vol. 54, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs the baby bear must venture out on his own, so we must send you off to forage for your future. We will, of course, miss your great wit at the dinner table, your hearty belch and fart. We will be saddened by the...
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From:Nature (Vol. 503, Issue 7475) Peer-ReviewedThere are easy ways to reduce the odds of suffering a life-changing injury, says Sara Klaas. Author(s): Sara J. Klaas 1 Author Affiliations: (1) Sara J. Klaas is director of the spinal cord injury service at...
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From:The Advocate (Vol. 34, Issue 7)To mark the approach of the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington, D.C., The Advocate compiled a round-up of events, observations, and articles that reflect on the long-term...
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From:Femspec (Vol. 21, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs 2020 opened, I was on my island in the Caribbean, off die coast of Cancun. in a shop, a wellknown feminist art installation project 1 had opened in El Centra. Well not my island exactly, but one on which I had been...
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From:The Journal of Humanistic Psychology (Vol. 38, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the quarter century since Abraham Maslow's death in 1970, his concept of peak experience has remained important to personality theory and such applied fields as counseling, psychotherapy, and education. However, it is...
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From:Sociology (Vol. 25, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe paper attempts to link theoretical ideas concerning the relation of agency and structure with empirical research on the transition from school to work. In particular, some of the propositions of structuration theory...
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From:Social Forces (Vol. 71, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedBuilding on life-course, demographic, and deviance research literatures, we analyze the search for adolescent role exits and operationalize it through a LISREL measurement model. We use panel and cross-sectional survey...
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From:Annual Review of Sociology (Vol. 23) Peer-ReviewedThe measurement of age, age structuring, and the life course has become more problematic as the study of human lives has moved toward more detailed analyses and explanations. As we seek to better understand the course of...
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From:Southern Cultures (Vol. 27, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTHE SWEETEST MULBERRIES in Durham, North Carolina, grow in Maplewood Cemetery, on a tree that shades the grave of Leon Jeffers. Every year, in late May, I forage my way downtown, heading north from the Lakewood...
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From:Maternal and Child Health Journal (Vol. 24, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction Prior research has identified psychosocial stress as a risk factor for adverse maternal and infant outcomes for non-Hispanic Black and White women. However, whether psychosocial stress differs in its...
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From:MedSurg Nursing (Vol. 30, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedRelational turning points (RTPs) are pivotal events or occurrences that impact the development of relationships over time. This study represents patients' and spouses' experiences of the journey with cancer and salient...