126 research outputs found
Perceived Social Support Trajectories and the All-Cause Mortality Risk of Older Mexican American Women and Men
FAMILY, FEMINISM, AND RACE IN AMERICA
Feminist scholarship has advanced our understanding of the family's relationship to the economy and the state over different historical periods. Theorizing about gender, class, and family life has led us to conclude that global explanations of the family are false. Our knowledge about the meaning of racial stratification for family life, however, still remains fragmented. This article asks, What does including race have to offer the study of the family? Analysis of two streams of revisionist family scholarship demonstrates the need for reconceptualizing racial diversity in a way that embraces the experiences of White families as well as racial ethnic families. Family upheavals created by industrialization and deindustrialization offer concrete examples of the importance of race in theorizing family life throughout American society.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66994/2/10.1177_089124390004001006.pd
Global and parenting-specific social support as protective factors for the well-being of Mexican American mothers of toddlers
African Feminist Scholars in Women's Studies: Negotiating Spaces of Dislocation and Transformation in the Study of Women
La Familia Chicana. Nancy Porras Hein and Julie E. Stokes (Eds.), Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, 2006, 100 pages, $37.50
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