Write about the ways writers use marital status in ‘A Doll’s House’ by Henrik Ibsen and ‘A Woman of No Importance’ by Oscar Wilde. Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’ has many key themes such as reputation and status in society‚ women’s rights and money and security. These themes add key elements to the play which help develop the narrative. Similarly Wilde focuses on these in ‘A Woman of No Importance’. In both plays‚ the women openly voice their opinions‚ sometimes not thinking of how this could affect
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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is the world’s central organization for international monetary cooperation. It is an organization in which almost all countries in the world work together to promote the common good (IMF 2006). That’s IMF is an international organization that oversees the global financial system by observing exchange rates and balance of payments‚ as well as offering financial and technical assistance. The primary purpose of IMF is to ensure the stability of the international
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marriage and divorce rates between 1970 and 2000‚ and the marital status of adult Americans in two of the years. Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features‚ and make comparisons where relevant. Simple introduction: Paraphrase the question. Use “the first chart... the second chart” The first bar chart shows changes in the number of marriages and divorces in the USA‚ and the second chart shows figures for the marital status of American adults in 1970 and 2000. It is clear
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marriage‚ partners have reached agreement for adjustment on most issues of importance for the relationship. Also‚ they are able to work together to solve most of the problems with mutual understanding and support. Each partner expresses satisfaction and happiness in the intimate relationship. Therefore I would like to discuss the three main factors contributing to a successful marriage‚ which are 1) intimacy; 2) communication; and 3) marital adjustment. Intimacy In Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory
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impact of marital conflict on children and to provide directions for future research. Children’s concerns about emotional security play a role in their regulation of emotional arousal and organization and in their motivation to respond in the face of marital conflict. Over time these response processes and internalized representations of parental relations that develop have implications for children’s long-term adjustment. Emotional security is seen as a product of past experiences with marital conflict
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Abstract Changes in the home environment such as marital conflict‚ divorce and poor parenting can adversely affect family dynamics‚ and children especially‚ can develop both mental and physical health problems. Research finds a correlation between parental separation and the internalizing and externalizing problem behaviors in children; this includes childhood sleep problems due to marital conflict. Children can help define and influence the dynamics of marital conflict. Studies show that in early childhood
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to have the best postdivorce adjustment. Keywords: divorce; gender; life course; social class Divorce is a complex event that can be viewed from multiple perspectives. For example‚ sociological research has focused primarily on structural and life course predictors of marital disruption‚ such as social class‚ race‚ and age at first marriage (Bumpass‚ Martin‚ & Sweet‚ 1991; White‚ 1991). Psychological research‚ in contrast‚ has focused on dimensions of marital interaction‚ such as conflict
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"Only acts of war and the events of natural disasters are more harmful to a child’s psyche than the divorce process." The Newsletter of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers‚ 1997 Prior to 1985‚ divorce was hard to obtain in Canada. However‚ with the passage of the Divorce Act of 1985‚ which allowed divorce after one year’s separation‚ the divorce rate reached an all time high of 3.55 (per 1‚000) in 1987 (Campbell‚ 2000). In 2000‚ Canada’s population reached 30.7 million. 1.4 million people
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References: Chen X.‚ Li D.‚ Liu M. (2000). Parental warmth‚ control and indulgence and their relations to adjustment in Chinese children: a longitudinal study. Journal of Family Psychology 14(3) pp. 401-419 Hart C.‚ McNeilly-Choque M. K.‚ Nelson D. A.‚ Olsen S. F.‚ Robinson C. C. (1998). Overt and relational aggression in Russian nursery-school-age children: parental style and marital linkages. Developmental Psychology 34(4) pp. 687-697 Whaley A. L. (2000). Sociocultural differences in the developmental
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divorce. Some react differently than do others‚ but all experience some kind of emotional change. Exposure to a highly stressful major life change event on children‚ which may overwhelm children ’s coping capacity‚ and thus compromising favorable adjustments (Garmezy‚ Masten‚ & Tellegen‚ 1984; Gersten‚ Langner‚ Eisenberg‚ & Simcha-Fagan‚ 1977; Rutter‚ 1983). Research has indicated that this is particularly true for children in the circumstances surrounding parental divorce‚ and in the immediate aftermath
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