scholarly journals 27.1 THE CIRCLE OF SECURITY PARENTING PROGRAM: AN EFFECTIVE INTERVENTION FOR MOTHERS SUFFERING FROM PERINATAL DEPRESSION TO BOLSTER MOTHER-INFANT BONDING AND PAVE THE WAY FOR SECURE ATTACHMENT

Author(s):  
Misty C. Richards
2007 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
서수정 ◽  
Kyungsook Lee ◽  
Yee-Jin Shin ◽  
Kim,Tae-Lyon

Author(s):  
Iyabo Ayodele Fatimilehin

This chapter discusses family group conferences (FGCs) and marginalised communities. FGCs offer an alternative and more sustainable approach to working with families who are marginalised or socially excluded. Used in the right way, and with due regard paid to the culture and context in which families are living, FGCs are a powerful and effective intervention. The danger is that practitioners and services believe that it is automatically culturally competent, and they need to be aware that it operates as a framework that embraces culture if true partnerships are formed with families and they are empowered to make choices about the way that the model works for them. In order to do this, practitioners must be able to have conversations with families about their cultural beliefs, values, and practices and work with them to ensure that the FGC embodies this. Furthermore, FGCs have the potential to strengthen and build communities and social capital.


1979 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 225-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasper E. Shealy

Paper shows how the belief that one has about how accidents happen (Theory of Accident Causation) affects the design of the Accident Report Form, the type of information gathered, the nature of your accident data base, the analysis of the data and, finally, the way in which you intervene in the situation. Two different approaches are examined, one which is typical of most existing systems, the other represents a much improved system that points the way to more effective intervention strategies.


2021 ◽  
pp. 025371762110050
Author(s):  
Ramdas Ransing ◽  
Prerna Kukreti ◽  
Mahesh Mahadevaiah ◽  
Pracheth Raghuveer ◽  
Ravichandra Karkal ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Beatriks Novianti Kiling-Bunga ◽  
Kristin Margiani ◽  
Indra Yohanes Kiling

Parenting is one of the most important responsibilities that someone could bear as a parent, probably the most burdensome too. Regardless, several questions are still left unanswered by Indonesian scientists, what are the field of studies related to parenting? What are the problems emanating from the practice of parenting and their solutions? What are the strategic steps one can take as psychology scientist or practitioner to improve parenting in Indonesia? This study examined the application of scoping review to provide responses for aforementioned questions. Just like the way a cartographer map an area in order to advance civilization, a scoping review is meant to enlighten future researchers with the answers on “what has been done?”. Five databases were searched in this review, 94 articles were discovered to undergo further rigorous selection, and 16 chosen articles were charted and analyzed accordingly. Finding shows that education, health, and psychology were the field of studies associated with high quality parenting research in Indonesia. Problems in child’s development caused by bad parenting attracted most researchers’ attention. Solutions provided were unique to each study’s context and hard to generalize. Finally, it is suggested that psychologists’ involvement in national parenting program is inevitable, and should start from today.


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