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CRFR
International Conference 2010 |
| Changing
Families in a Changing World |
| June
16 - 18 • 2010 |
| John
MacIntyre Centre • University of Edinburgh •
Edinburgh • UK |
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| Presentations |
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A)
Paid work and family care
Fluid
employment and fluid families? Female nurses negotiating
time
and space for care and work
JaneMaree Maher, Monash University, Australia
Money
talks. A discursive exploration of working parents accounts
of parental leave and employment
Gemma Yarwood, Manchester Metropolitan University, United
Kingdom
Can
families be re-gendered?: Nurses, builders and their families
managing
work and care in Australia
Jo Lindsay, Monash University, Australia
Does
work-family conflict hurt the organisation? An examination
of cross-field effect
Jiafung Lu, Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong
B) Changing patterns of family formation
The
effect of employment insecurity and unemployment on family
formation in Hungary
Ivett Szalma, University of Budapest, Hungary
Postponing
parenthood in Central and Eastern Europe (case of the
Czech Republic)
Hana Haskova, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,
Czech Republic
Transnational
families: patterns of partnering and childbearing
Kim Caarls, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
Are
old mums the new mums?
Paul Bradshaw and Louise Marryat, National Centre for
Social Research,
United Kingdom
C) The family/policy interface
Use
of childcare and early education by families in England:
trends
of the last decade
Svetlana Speight, National Centre for Social Research,
United Kingdom
Mutuality
in Scottish and Australian healthcare policy: implications
for notions
of the family
Jessica Gunson, Centre for Research on Families &
Relationships, University of Edinburgh, UK
The
socio-economic security of the family life: socio-economic
problems
of families with children with special needs
Jolanta Millere, Latvia University of Agriculture, Latvia
Factors
influencing childcare in Selangor, Malaysia: a qualitative
approach
among the mothers
Rosnah Sutan, University of Kebangsaan, Malaysia
D) Grandparents and intergenerational relationships
Grandparents
doing gender: Experiences of grandmothers and grandfathers
caring
for grandchildren in Australia
Briony Horsfall, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
Intergenerational
Family Relations and the Transition to Parenthood from
a Cross-cultural perspective
Katharine Ulbrich, Dresden Leibniz Graduate School, Germany
Relationships with grandparents from the perspective of
adolescents: Its nature and significance
Jo-Pei Tan, University Putra Malaysia, Malaysia
“Invisible”
grandparents of transnational families: Experiences of
Chinese elderly caregivers in Canada and policy considerations
Rachel Zhou, McMaster University, Canada
E) Meaning and experiences of motherhood and mothering
Mothering
at middle age: lacking in familial support?
Maud Perrier, University of Bristol, United Kingdom
Negotiating
diversity within the “Culture of Motherhood”
Fiona Nelson, University of Calgary, Canada
Intraclass
stratification in Mothering: a comparative study of middle-class
storytelling mothers in Taiwan
Juhan Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Trying
to do more with less? The mothering experiences of middle
income mothers
in North America
Shelley Pacholok, The University of British Columbia –
Okanagan, Canada
F) Diverse forms of marriage
Continuing
consequences of a constraining institution of marriage
Carrie Yodanis, University of British Columbia, Canada
Forced
marriage in the UK: Prevalence and Response
Peter Keogh, National Centre for Social Research, United
Kingdom
Changing Marriage in the South Asian Immigrant Community
Farha Ternikar, Le Moyne College, United States of America
Transforming polygamy: migration, transnationalism and
multiple
marriages among Muslim minorities
Katharine Charsley, University of Bristol, United Kingdom
and Anika Liversage, SFI - the Danish National Centre
for Social Research
G) Constructions of relatedness in different reproductive
contexts
Secrecy versus disclosure within families created by gamete
donation: effects
of parent psychological well-being, parent-child relationships
and children’s psychological well-being
Lucy Blake, Cambridge University, United Kingdom
Surrogacy,
gay male couples and the significance of biogenetic paternity
Deborah Dempsey, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
Risk,
trust and sperm donations: New ways of becoming and being
family
in lesbian couples’ reproductive practices of self-arranging
donor conception
Petra Nordqvist, Univeristy of Manchester, United Kingdom
H) Place, family and identity
Exploring
the cultural landscapes of transnational families
John Watters, National University of Ireland Maynooth,
Ireland
The family and home between cultures, space and time
Maki Kimura, Open University, United Kingdom
“Where
are you really from?” Identity and belongings issues
amongst children and young people growing up in rural
communities
Philomena de Lima, Highlands and Islands University, United
Kingdom
Workshop
Lived
experiences through economic downturn in Britain: perspectives
across
time and across the lifecourse
Rosalind Edwards, Sarah Irwin, Rachel Thomson, Joanna
Bornatt, London South
Bank University, Jeni
Harden, Edinburgh Napier University, Nick Emmel,
Leeds University & Karen
Henwood, Cardiff University,United Kingdom
A) Transforming relationships: friends, family
and leisure
Changing
lifestyles, changing times: A view of 9-yearold’s
leisure activities
and their impact on family interaction
Erika Doyle, University of Dublin, Ireland
Transforming intergenerational relations through new technologies:
Grandparents and their relationships with grandchildren
Anna Tarrant, Lancaster University, United Kingdom
Friends with real benefits: sex and solidarity among men
who have sex with men
Jennifer Wilkinson, University of Sydney, Australia
B) Migration and families ‘left behind’
When
women make houses: fathering in the context of transnational
labour migration
Lan Anh Hoang, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Transnational
families: the care triangle and the well-being of left-behind
children in South East Asia
Elspeth Graham, St Andrews University, United Kingdom
Female
Migration and The Vietnamese Family in Transition
Thao Thi Vu, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
C) Experiences of being single
Missing the marriage transition: experiences of Malay
Muslim women in Malaysia
Rozita Ibrahim, National University of Malaysia, Malaysia
Single
voices: understanding singledom in a cross-cultural comparison
between
Italy and Britain
Serena Rapisarda, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
D) Growing old and elder care
Caregiving
for elderly parents: family system perspectives in context
of Thai culture
Poonsuk Wachwithan, Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University,
Thailand
Investigating
familial, intimate and personal networks of lesbian, gay
and
bisexual elders towards the end of life
Kathryn Almack, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom
E) Young people and non-familial support
The
right person at the right time: Advocacy for children
and young people
Susan Elsley, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships,
University of Edinburgh, UK
Enabling effective parenting through the longitudinal
measurement of the perceived
social support of adolescents
Cormac Forkan, National University of Ireland, Ireland
Without
family support: Young people’s reasons for homelessness
and how they manage their relationships and health access
Dorothy Henning, University of Melbourne, Australia
F) Having children: longitudinal and lifecourse
perspectives
15
to 30 (and beyond): an analysis of family formation and
first birth
using the Scottish Longitudinal Study
Kevin Ralston, University of Stirling, United Kingdom
Changing
lives, changing families: A lifecourse approach to understanding
childbearing decision-making in Scotland
Zhong Eric Chen, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Maternal
employment and idealised motherhood: Young women's attitudes
towards career continuation after having children
Linda Peach, University of Queensland, Australia
Workshop Session:
Ways
of coping with challenges affecting families in resource
poor-settings
Bregje De Kok & Oonagh O’Brien, Queen Margaret
University, Edinburgh and
Esther Lupafya, Malawi
A) The experience of transnational families
Transnational migrant mothers and children negotiating
change and continuity
Umut Erel, The Open University, United Kingdom
The
life of transnational families in Romanian villages
Viroela Ducu, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania
Multilocal
families: the accomplishment of daily family life under
conditions
of multilocality
Michaela Schier, German Youth Institute
The central role of the family system in a sustainable
nested
environmental ecology
Edward T Wimberley, Florida Gulf Coast University, United
States of America
B) Young people and family change
Young
people’s perceptions of families and experiences
of family structure
change in the 21st century
Andy Rigg, Statistics New Zealand, New Zealand
Family
instability and children’s school readiness in Great
Britain
Paula Fomby, University of Colorado Denver, United States
of America
Social
positioning of women, changes in the outer world and educational
opportunities for girls in rural India
Pranati Mohanraj, The University of York, United Kingdom
Young
peoples’ outcomes and intergenerational effects
Susan Murray, University of Stirling, United Kingdom
C) Dynamics of family change
New family designs in response to a changing world? The
case of gay and lesbian “co-parenting”
Cathy Herbrand, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Women
changing the family relationships in Indian Panchayats
Hiranmayee Mishra, University of York, United Kingdom
Parenting behaviour and child adjustment among ethnically
mixed and ethnically matched families in Malaysia
Jo-Pei Tan, University Putra Malaysia, Malaysia
Analysing
parents’ migration projects through their children’s
positions
Tatiana Eremenko, Insitut National d’Etudes Demographiques,
France
D) Violence and victimisation
Control, avoidance or release: How childhoods of sexually
abused men impacted
on relationships with partners and children
Sarah Nelson, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships,
University of Edinburgh, UK
Young
people and violence: using age as a concept to construct
‘real’ violence
Nancy Lombard, Edinburgh Napier University, United Kingdom
Victimization
of Older Adults in Western Countries: Impacts of Aging
and Entho-culturally Diversity
Christine Walsh, University of Calgary, Canada
E) Gender, parenting and families
Men at work (at home): caregiving fathers and family change
Gillian Ranson, University of Calgary, Canada
Work-family
balance: The changes in gender role attitudes in Luxembourg
Maria Valentova, CEPS/INSTEAD, Luxembourg
Changing
care in Slovenia: gender, parenting and family
Ziva Humer, Peace Institute, Slovenia & Alenka Svab,
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
‘Filial Son’ and Chinese Male Migrant Workers’
Identity Formation
Xiaodong Lin, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
F) Marriage, partnering and intimate relationships
Same-sex
marriage in Canada: five years later
Hilary Rose, Concordia University, Canada
Between “me” or “we”: consuming
“detraditionalized” weddings in Hong Kong
Ho Yee Vienne Tso, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Hong Kong
Language as a power resource in immigrant intimate relationships
Sean Lauer, University of British Columbia, Canada
I’d rather it be more acceptable to be a normal
family: the re-traditionalization
of family-life
Julia Carter, University of York, United Kingdom
G) Place, family and identity: the experience of migration
My
home in where my husband is: Chinese wives’ attitude
towards
migration and family
Wenchao Wei, University of York, United Kingdom
The
family remembered as an exercise in subjectivity: migrant
South Asian
doctors reflect on the influence of their families of
origin
Joanne Bornat, Open University, United Kingdom
Family-related
considerations of the remigration decision
of 'new' Polish migrants to the UK.
Sue Heath, Derek McGhee & Paulina Trevena, Centre
for Population Change,
University of Southampton, United Kingdom
Transnational
Family Solidarity across three Generations. The Portuguese
Migrants from the Azores to Quebec (Canada)
Ana Gherghel, Universidade dos Acores, Portugal
H) Family change in historical context
Lymansville: 1809-2009, 200 years of Immigration and Textile
History
Judith Bessette, Older Sons of Italy in America, United
States of America
Did
‘Individualisation’ ever happen? Personal
life in 1950
Simon Duncan, University of Bradford, United Kingdom
Historical
comparative analysis of family and parenting: A feasibility
study
across sources and timeframes
Val Gillies, London South Bank University, United Kingdom
Writing
the field: a book on key concepts in family studies
Jane Ribbens McCarthy, Open University, United Kingdom
and Rosalind Edwards,
London South Bank University,United Kingdom
Challenging relationships? Children and young people’s
participation
– cross-country debates
Kay Tisdall, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships,
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
A:1) Practice and international adoption
What
is good practice for countries involved in International
adoption?
Monica Dowling, The Open University, United Kingdom
“Difficult
Encounter”: Principles of early family interventions
for families
with internationally adopted children
Irene Feigin, Independent, United States of America
The
Slovak experiences with transnational adoption
Jana Levicka and Katarina Levicka, University of Trnava,
Slovak Republic
A:2) Children, families and dislocation
The
Stolen Generations: Accounts of ‘Removed’
Aboriginal Children
and Public History
Jennifer Peet, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
B) Children and the experience of migration
A
change of State: Migrant children and imaginative geographies
Giovanna Fassetta, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
Children’s
accommodation and care arrangements in the context of
urban migration
Katharine Hall, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Mexican migration and child poverty: Do extended-household
living arrangement
s ameliorate child poverty?
Mark Leach, The Pennsylvania State University, United
States of America
C) The experiences of young or lone parents
The
protective effects of parenting attitudes among young,
single mothers
Tania Smith, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Being
young and becoming a parent
Sveva Magaraggia, University of Mila-Bicocca, Italy
D) Networks of care in children's lives
Children’s experiences home alone: results of a
Canadian on-line survey
Mónica Ruiz-Casares, McGill University, Canada
Safeguarding
children in families and communities within changing
risk environments
Sally Holland, Cardiff University, United Kingdom
E) Living and marrying across borders
Leading
toward a right trajectory: Taiwanese mothers’ involvement
in sons’
cross-border marriage
Hsing Miao Chi, University of York, United Kingdom
A
family impact study on cross-boundary living families
in Hong Kong
Moses Mui, Hong Kong Council of Social Service, Hong Kong
Families
crossing the HK-Mainland China Border: implications to
family research
Kin Wai Anthony Wong, The Hong Kong Council of Social
Service, Hong Kong
F) Divorce and Separation
A
service response to changes in family structures - the
case of an
innovative model of support for separated families in
the Republic of Ireland
Noreen Kearns & Liam Coen, National University of
Ireland, Galway, Ireland
Sharing
Surnames: Children, Family and Kinship
Haley Davies, King's College, London
G) The impact of recession on everyday family
life
Financial support for families with children in Central
and Eastern Europe:
differences, similarities, and the impact of recession
Eva Mitchell, Sociological Institute of the Czech Academy
of Sciences,
Czech Republic
Reaching
for “Success” from a place seen as “second
best”: perspectives of rural
US families in the new economy
Katherine MacTavish, Oregon State University, United States
of America
H) Communication technologies and the shaping
of relationships
Communication
technologies and the reshaping of the work-family relationship
Emily Rose, Australian National University, Australia
Youth,
privacy and parenting in the Internet Age
Zachari Duncalf, Strathclyde University, United Kingdom
“Life
on the whole is more complicated than it was….”
Leanne Franklin, Loughborough University, United Kingdom
Migrant
children in Changing Europe
Marta Moskal, Jenny Ozga & Marina Shapira, University
of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Day 3 - Friday 18 June
A) The changing nature of fatherhood
Changes
in Japanese fatherhood after two decades of recession
Scott North, Osaka University, Japan
Evolving
fatherhood: shifting intergenerational dynamics among
first-time fathers
in contemporary Ireland
Jemimah Bailey, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
B) Globalisation and patterns of care
Intergenerational
support in Dutch and immigrant families in The Netherlands
Djamila Schans, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
Global
and local care chains in Slovenia
Majda Hrzenjak, Peace Institute, Slovenia
Transnational families and shifts in Eldercare
Sreerupa S Irudaya rajan, Centre for Development Studies,
India
C) Young people and the transition to independent
households
The
role of higher education in promoting non-family living
among young adults
in the UK
Ann Berrington & Juliet Stone, University of Southampton,
United Kingdom
The
role of family and friends in young people’s pathways
towards residential independence
Sue Heath & Emma Calvert, University of Southampton,
United Kingdom
D) Transnational adoption in historical and contemporary
contexts
Orientations of transnational adoption: historical reflections
Cecilia Love, Cardiff University, United Kingdom
Transnational
adoption challenges: through the eyes of youth from Eastern
Europe who are experiencing problems
Sandy Bailey, Montana State University, United States
of America
Practices
of cultural and ethnic imagination as self-conscious citizenship
in Flemish-Ethiopian adoptive families
Katrien De Graeve, Ghent University, Belgium
E) Social and economic change and older people
The
making of place – the meaning of home for older
people
Jean Davison, University of Teesside, United Kingdom
Changing
financial landscapes for older people
Carol Brennan, Queen Margaret University, United Kingdom
F) Social policies and fertility change
Will
social policy form part of the decision-making process
about maternity leave
in the Czech Republic?
Michael Bartosova & Lenka Slepickova, Masaryk University,
Czech Republic
Addressing
fertility decline through a reproductive rights framework
Reilly Anne Dempsey, Independent, United Kingdom
Single Subjects: Representations of Autonomy and Agency
in discourses on singleness and childlessness
Roona Simpson, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships,
University of Edinburgh, UK
G) Couple/Partnering Relationships
The
development of couples: A relational view on the dynamics
of intimate relationships
Caroline Ruiner, University of Augsburg, Germany
Do partnerships last?
Julie Jefferies, Office of National Statistics, United
Kingdom
H) Parents and parenting
Tackling
anti-social behaviour: do family intervention projects
really work?
Vera Schneider, National Centre for Social Research, United
Kingdom
Study of parents’ smoking behaviours in the presence
of children
Ping-Ling Chen, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan
From
‘good’ babies to ‘bad’ mothers:
choice, complexity and the burden of interpretation
Kelly Davis, Centre for Research on Families & Relationships,
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Caring communities: models of supporting Refugees and
Asylum seekers
following experiences of torture
Kathleen Van de Vijver, Norma McKinnon and Roy Farquharson,
Medical Foundation Scotland |
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