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Childrearing and Infant Care Issues

Autor Pranee Liamputtong
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 ian 2007
Child-rearing practices in every society occur in accordance with the cultural norms of the society. In most societies, however, child-rearing practices share a common value: the preservation of life and maintenance of the health and well-being of a new-born infant. In this volume, the authors bring together salient issues regarding cultural beliefs and practices and social issues regarding infant care and child-rearing and infant feeding practices as well as early motherhood in different societies. They show that traditional practices surrounding infant care and child-rearing continue to live despite the fact that many societies have been modernised.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781600216107
ISBN-10: 1600216102
Pagini: 291
Ilustrații: b/w photos & tables
Dimensiuni: 189 x 266 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Nova Science Publishers Inc

Cuprins

Preface; On Child-rearing and Infant Care: A Cross-Cultural Perspective; Kinship and Child-rearing in Two African Societies: A Comparative Investigation of the Orring and the Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria; Night-Time Infant Care: Cultural Practice, Evolution, and Infant Development; Cultural Beliefs and Traditional Health Practices in the Context of War, Population Displacement and Social Disruption: The Examples of "Ebino" and "Tea-Tea" in Northern Uganda; Child-rearing Practices and Parental Values in an Indigenous Sami Population in Northern Norway: A Cross-Cultural Comparison; Child-rearing Practices Among Primary Caregivers of HIV-Infected Children Aged 0-5 Years in Chiang Mai, Thailand; Women's Work and Weaning: A Case Study from Periurban Kathmandu, Nepal; Sex Work and Unplanned Infants in Highlands Papua, Indonesia; Beliefs about Pregnancy, Childbearing and New-born Infants in a Rural District in Northern Malawi; Starting Out: The 'Omugwo' Practice and Instilling the Rudiments of Child-rearing in Mothers among the Igbo of Southeastern Nigeria; The Role of Tamang Grandmothers in Perinatal Care, Makwanpur District, Nepal; Maternity and Identity Among Ethnically Indian Immigrant Women in Melbourne, Australia; Baby, Souls, Name and Health: Traditional and changed Rituals for a New-born Infant among Hmong Immigrant Mothers in Australia; Cultural Conceptions of Infant Health and Development Among Bolivian Immigrant Mothers in Italy; Sites of Conflict and Accommodation: Child-rearing Values and Practices in Vietnamese-Australian Families with Young Children; Infant Feeding Beliefs and Practices Among Afghan Women Living in Melbourne, Australia; Index.