scholarly journals VIOLENCIA INTRAFAMILIAR Y SU IMPACTO EN LA FORMACIÓN DE VALORES Y EL DESARROLLO COGNITIVO DE LOS EDUCANDOS

2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 95
Author(s):  
Bárbara Del Carmen Álvarez ◽  
Óscar Elías Bolívar Chávez

La familia es la principal forma de organización de los seres humanos, es una agrupación social basada en lazos de consanguinidad (como la filiación entre padres e hijos) o en el establecimiento de un vínculo reconocido socialmente (como el matrimonio). Una de las problemáticas que enfrenta la familia en la sociedad actual es la violencia que se refiere a todas aquellas acciones de agresión cometidas por algún miembro de la familia en contra de otro y que tiene la intención de causar daño en su vida, su cuerpo, su integridad emocional, en su libertad o su patrimonio. En este sentido esta problemática es la causa esencial que influye en la funcionabilidad de los roles en los miembros de la familia y con ello la afectación psicológica y social del adolescente. De ahí que el trabajo que se presenta tiene por objetivo proponer acciones de orientación a los adolescentes y las familias para prevenir acciones de violencia y con ello el desarrollo de estilos de vida saludables encaminado al desarrollo de un adecuado aprendizaje de los alumnos. Se realiza un análisis bibliográfico de la temática y se aportan recomendaciones para los docentes en la atención a la violencia intrafamiliar a partir de la labor educativa que se desarrolla en la institución escolar. PALABRAS CLAVE: Violencia; violencia intrafamiliar; adolescente; familia; estilos de vida INTRAFAMILY VIOLENCE AND ITS IMPACT ON THE FORMATION OF VALUES AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCANDOS ABSTRACT  The family is the main form of organization of human beings. It is a social grouping based on consanguinity (such as the parent-child relationship) or the establishment of a socially recognized bond (such as marriage). One of the problems facing the family in today's society is violence that refers to all those acts of aggression committed by one member of the family against another and that intends to cause harm in his life, his body, Their emotional integrity, their freedom or their heritage. In this sense, this problematic is the essential cause that influences the functionability of the roles in the family members and with it the psychological and social affectation of the adolescent. Hence, the objective of this work is to propose actions for counseling adolescents and families to prevent violence and, with it, the development of healthy lifestyles aimed at the development of adequate student learning. A bibliographic analysis of the thematic is carried out and recommendations are made for the teachers in the attention to the intrafamily violence from educational work that is developed in the school institution. KEYWORDS: Violence; intrafamily violence; adolescent; family; lifestyles.

TEME ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 083
Author(s):  
Ranka V Vujović

Numerous entities in various procedural roles participate in the litigation proceedings for the exercising, denying and restoring of parental rights. The usual classification of litigation participants into subjects in a narrow, and subjects in a broader sense, may apply to such litigations. In the narrow sense, the subjects of the litigations are the litigation court and the litigants. In a broader sense, these are all persons who in any way participate in the litigation: interveners, counsel, witnesses, expert witnesses, interpreters, translators. Some of them participate in the proceedings to protect their own, and others to protect the rights and interests of others, and some are there to provide the necessary assistance in collecting the litigation material, present evidence, etc. Pursuant to the family laws, the capacity of a party in these proceedings, through the standardization of the right to the standing to commence an action, is assigned to the child, parents, custody authority and the public prosecutor. However, these are only potential, but not necessary participants in these proceedings. The proceedings may also be initiated and conducted without all the participants of the family-legal relation participating in them. As a rule, there is no participation of the child as a party, although, essentially, the child's right to live with parents and to have (adequate) parental care is the central theme of the proceedings. In all of these litigations, in fact, legal protection is afforded to the rights of the child arising from the parent-child relationship, namely from the rights and duties of the parent towards the child. This paper critically analyzes the national regulations governing the position of the child in litigation proceedings in the legal matters of exercising, denying and the restoring of parental rights, with a view to determine whether, and to what extent, the solutions contained in those regulations comply with the postulates of a fair trial, enable the exercise of a child’s right to participate in the proceedings that are to decide on the issues that affect him/her and provide effective protection of his/her procedural rights.


2015 ◽  
pp. 296-329
Author(s):  
N V Lowe ◽  
G Douglas

This chapter discusses the legal position of children. It first considers the relatively simple issues of who the law regards as a child and the meaning of ‘child of the family’. It then discusses the child's legal status; the changing nature of the parent-child relationship; and the still developing notion of the child's independent or autonomy rights.


2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanghag Kim ◽  
Grazyna Kochanska ◽  
Lea J. Boldt ◽  
Jamie Koenig Nordling ◽  
Jessica J. O'Bleness

AbstractParent–child relationships are critical in development, but much remains to be learned about the mechanisms of their impact. We examined the early parent–child relationship as a moderator of the developmental trajectory from children's affective and behavioral responses to transgressions to future antisocial, externalizing behavior problems in the Family Study (102 community mothers, fathers, and infants, followed through age 8) and the Play Study (186 low-income, diverse mothers and toddlers, followed for 10 months). The relationship quality was indexed by attachment security in the Family Study and maternal responsiveness in the Play Study. Responses to transgressions (tense discomfort and reparation) were observed in laboratory mishaps wherein children believed they had damaged a valued object. Antisocial outcomes were rated by parents. In both studies, early relationships moderated the future developmental trajectory: diminished tense discomfort predicted more antisocial outcomes, but only in insecure or unresponsive relationships. That risk was defused in secure or responsive relationships. Moderated mediation analyses in the Family Study indicated that the links between diminished tense discomfort and future antisocial behavior in insecure parent–child dyads were mediated by stronger discipline pressure from parents. By indirectly influencing future developmental sequelae, early relationships may increase or decrease the probability that the parent–child dyad will embark on a path toward antisocial outcomes.


2002 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 285-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theresa Barron-McKeagney ◽  
Jane D. Woody ◽  
Henry J. D'Souza

The Family Mentoring Program (FMP), which provided approximately 1 year of mentoring for at-risk, 10-year-old Latino children and their parents, offered individual mentoring, group educational sessions for children and parents, and group social/recreational activities. This study examined mothers' perceptions of the parent–child relationship and of family strength as measured by the Parent–Child Relationship Inventory (PCRI) and the Family Hardiness Index (FHI). Analysis focused on factors expected to contribute to variance in the outcome measures. Regression results indicated that involvement in parent group education predicted higher scores on the Support and Communication measures. Compared to the standardized samples used in the development of these measures, mothers, at the beginning of the program, scored lower on six of seven PCRI subscales and on the FHI. By the end of the program, mothers' scores on Support and Limit Setting had improved, no longer differing from the standardized norms. The overall findings suggest that parents of children in mentoring programs need services and parent education and that they can benefit from these. Future research should focus on careful design and evaluation of multifaceted mentoring programs that include parents.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 221-239
Author(s):  
Yohanes Budiarto ◽  
Fransisca Iriani Roesmala Dewi ◽  
Rahmah Hastuti

The family's emotional psychological and social well-being is influenced by how parent-child relations quality is perceived by each other, both of the child and father, as well as the child and the mother. This study focused on the dyadic analysis of parent-child quality relationships prediction on the emotional, psychological, and social well-being of the family members in Indonesia. The study involved 230 dyads comprised of fathers, mothers, and children who completed the Revised Parent-Child Interaction Questionnaire measuring the parent-child relationship quality and the Mental Health Continuum Short Form (MHC-SF) to measure family well-being. Adopting the actor–partner interdependence model (APIM) and structural equation modeling (SEM) as the statistics technique, the results showed that in general, no partner’s effect was found. To be specific, dyadic relations between father and child showed an actor’s effect influencing their well-being. On the other hand, the dyadic relations between child and mother showed neither the actor’s effect nor the partner’s effect on their well-being. The study highlights the vital role of fathers and adolescents in their own well-being.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
Mireisys Perdomo Thompson ◽  
Catalina Virgen Gómez parra

El trabajo preventivo de la familia desde su labor educativa con los hijos es uno de los grandes retos a los que se enfrenta la institución educativa, la que requiere de vías, métodos y alternativas que sean efectivas para lograr alcanzar un desarrollo integral de los niños y adolescentes. De ahí que la preparación recíproca de ambas instituciones sea una prioridad en la educación cubana. En el presente artículo se exponen algunos fundamentos teóricos que sustentan los principios formativos de nuestro sistema educativo como eje esencial desde la propia actividad del educador, el que debe contemplar la atención a la familia desde la diversidad y el contexto en que se desarrollan estos niños y adolescentes. PALABRAS CLAVE: trabajo preventivo; familia; labor educativa; institución educativa. PREVENTIVE WORK OF THE FAMILY IN INTERACTION WITH THE INSTITUTION ABSTRACT The preventive work of the family from its educational work with the children is one from the big challenges to those that faces the educational institution, the one that requires of roads, methods and alternative that are effective to be able to reach an integral development of the children and adolescents. With the result that the reciprocal preparation of both institutions is a priority in the Cuban education. Presently article some theoretical foundations are exposed that sustain the formative principles of our educational system as essential axis from the educator's own activity, the one that should contemplate the attention to the family from the diversity and the context in that these children and adolescents are developed. KEYWORDS: work; preventive; family; educational work; educational institution.


2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 401-423
Author(s):  
Brooke Walton ◽  
Bernadette J. Saunders

This qualitative synthesis explores how children perceive physical punishment in the family context. A search of four online databases identified eight qualitative studies. Findings revealed that children provided detailed accounts about their experiences of physical punishment, and they associated physical punishment with both emotional and physical pain. Children justified the use of physical punishment based on their precipitating behaviour, their status, and the intergenerational transmission of physical punishment. Children suggested alternative discipline to physical punishment, and urged caregivers to respect them. Children also recognised that physical punishment escalated in severity and negatively influenced the parent-child relationship. The results highlight the benefit of including children in research, the need to understand the factors that shape children’s perspectives and, most importantly, the ongoing influence of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (uncrc) (1989), to ensure that children’s human rights are recognised, and more widely upheld worldwide.


Author(s):  
Sanita Vanaga ◽  
Inga Pumpuriņa

Domestic violence is a cycle of various harassment in which the abuser can be any member of the family. Both media and research on domestic violence focus on the behaviour of adult family members, while there is a lack of research analysing child abuse, for example against their parents. The current legal framework establishes the procedure for bringing an abusive person to justice, however, the provided sanctions do not apply to a child being violent in case the offense is not of a criminal nature. The study presents the research in two parts, the first part, indicating the psychological and pedagogical aspects of the problem, and the second - the problem of the legal regulation of liability.The aim of the study was to analyse the regulatory framework, which determines the child's responsibility in cases of child-to-parent violence, to identify the problems of the legal framework and to develop proposals for the improvement of the legal framework.The study was developed interdisciplinary, performing the analysis of national and international legal acts, analysing statistical data and research on current issues. Analytical and descriptive method, grammatical, historical, teleological and systemic interpretation methods were used in the study.As a result of the research, a number of problems were identified. These were related to the identification of a child being violent, the rights and responsibilities of the family and society in cases of escalating violence, as well as the issue of taking responsibility for the child's violence. At the same time, it was concluded that cases of violence by children to parents are difficult to identify, which may be due to the parent-child relationship and ignorance of the parent's problem, resulting in a formal determination of the child's responsibility in case of violence. In turn, the legal framework should strengthen not only the procedure of holding the children responsible for their violent behavior, but also to call for interdisciplinary prevention of violence committed by children. 


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 930-933
Author(s):  
Sherman Little ◽  
Bertram M. Beck

A CAREFUL review of the research literature bearing on delinquency makes it evident that delinquency is a pathology transmitted from the community to the family and thence to the individual youngster. The relative importance of family and community and individual factors vary, however, with a particular child. In some instances the delinquent act is almost a direct outgrowth of community conditions; in such cases family influence is of importance only insofar as it has failed to prepare a youngster to deal with the environmental situation confronting him. In other instances the delinquent act is directly related to the nature of the parent-child relationship; in these cases community conditions are of importance only insofar as they have been stimulating or precipitating factors or have influenced the parental capacity. Observations of communities with low delinquency rates, combined with refined statistical analyses of the correlation between delinquent behavior and factors usually thought to be productive of delinquency, reveal that in communities that have social stability, little population movement, homogeneity of population, and the kind of interaction between people that represents a sense of belonging to the community, there is very little crime and delinquency. This is true even when such communities are marked by a great concentration of poverty, bad housing, a population of minority group members, and the absence of health and welfare agencies. On the other hand, a socially disorganized neighborhood, peopled by residents who do not possess a sense of community comradeship and participation, will be productive of delinquency even though it may have good housing and superior economic status.


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