Essays about: "parenting"
Showing result 11 - 15 of 90 essays containing the word parenting.
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11. Digital natives and parental surveillance: A qualitative study of parenting practices and child surveillance technology
University essay from Lunds universitet/Sociologiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/SociologiAbstract : The thesis sets out to explore how surveillance technology is affecting modern parental practices. Based on 12 in-depth interviews with parents of children aged 10-17, technological surveillance and parenting are studied. READ MORE
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12. "It's such a norm brott" : Non-Monogamous Parenting Practices in Sweden
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Centrum för genusvetenskapAbstract : Normative ideas of what it means to be a ‘good’ parent can often come into conflict with non-monogamy. This thesis explores how non-monogamous parents living in Sweden adhere to certain normative relationship and family practices, while rejecting others. READ MORE
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13. Quality of life of Caregivers of Children with Cerebral Palsy : A Systematic Literature Review
University essay from Jönköping University/HLK, CHILDAbstract : Caregivers of children with cerebral palsy have to undergo various struggles and difficulties while parenting their children with CP, which is a long-term process. This prolonged caregiving can affect their quality of life and well being. READ MORE
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14. Attachment-Oriented Motherhood and the German New Right on Instagram
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Centrum för genusvetenskapAbstract : In this thesis, I investigate the German-speaking attachment-oriented parenting community on Instagram. Focusing on a debate about new-right activities in the community, I analyze how motherhood (self-)conceptions were discursively entangled with questions of resistance to and tolerance of the new right. READ MORE
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15. Constructing the Ideal Parent in Post-Genocide Rwanda : Social Engineering and Informality in Kigali Settlements after Genocide
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Hugo Valentin-centrumAbstract : Previous studies of post-genocide Rwanda illutrates how nation-building and the government’s urgency to break with the past results in aims to rearrange society in order to prevent further violence and hostility. Developmental aims are also embedded in the broader project of post-genocide nation-building, adapted to promote a new and improved way of life after the genocide. READ MORE