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Informationen zum Autor Ross D. Parke is Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Emeritus, and past Director of the Center for Family Studies at the University of California, Riverside. He has authored or co-authored several books on the field, including Fathers and Fatherhood , Throwaway Dads , Child Psychology: A Contemporary Perspective , and Social Development . Klappentext Future Families explores the variety of family forms which characterize our contemporary culture while addressing the implications of these increasingly diverse family units on child development. Noted psychologist Ross Parke traces the shifts in parental roles resulting from increased divorce rates, single-parent families, cohabiting couples, same-gender parental relationships, and other non-traditional family types. Parke reveals how the ideal nuclear family stereotype is further challenged by non-traditional family forms introduced through outside cultures, ethnic variations within our own culture, and assisted reproductive technologies. He offers recommendations as to how social policies can be modified to better reflect the new diversity of family forms and suggests ways to provide support for all families to improve the lives of adults and children. Timely and enlightening, Future Families offers rich insights into ways contemporary society has redrawn the boundaries of family. Zusammenfassung An interdisciplinary look at changing family models in recent decades! Future Families draws from work in many areas including developmental psychology! sociology! cross-cultural scholarship! ethnic studies! history! legal studies! economics! and more. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface vi Acknowledgments ix About the Author xi 1 Challenges to the Ideal Family Form 1 2 Changing Parental Roles: The Sharing and Redistribution of Family Responsibility in Contemporary Families 25 3 Further Assaults on the "Ideal" Family Form: Divorce, Remarriage, Single Parenthood, and Cohabitation 55 4 Same-Gender Families: Are Two Mothers or Fathers Good Enough? 84 5 How Many "Parents" Are Too Many? Insights from the Assisted Reproductive Technologies Front 111 6 Many Mothers, Many Fathers, Many Others: Insights from Other Cultures 141 7 All about Relatives and Fictive Relatives: Insights from Diverse Ethnic Groups in Our Own Culture (Past and Present) 160 8 Multiple Caregivers: Harmful or Helpful for Caregivers Themselves 191 9 In Support of Alternative Family Forms: Overcoming the Barriers to Change 209 References 243 Index 292 ...