Peril[o]us development : child raising and identity formation under stress
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Peril[o]us development : child raising and identity formation under stress
(The child in his family, v. 8)(Yearbook of the international association for child and adolescent psychiatry and allied professions, Vol. 8)
Wiley, c1988
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Note
Includes bibliographies and index
"A Wiley-Interscience publication."
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The eighth volume in the "International Yearbook" series takes a close look at the "children of disaster" who survive a perilous upbringing but show a wide range of psychopathology as a consequence. Chapters deal with the issues of parenting and the child's development of self-image and self-concept under stressful conditions of varying types. Contributors to this volume shed light on the reactions of the child under such stresses in different cultures and at different stages of development. New ways of treating children in these predicaments have been given special consideration, particularly the interplay of diagnosis with therapeutic and preventative interventions. Situations addressed include disordered parents, physical illness, parental addiction, disaster trauma, developmental problems, violent environment, deprivation, maltreatment, child sexual abuse and others.
Table of Contents
- Partial table of contents:
- The Response to Overwhelming Stress in Children: Some Introductory Comments (E. Anthony)
- Defensive Processes in Response to Stressful Separation in Early Life (J. Bowlby)
- Some Thoughts on the Concepts of Identity and Identification (C. Chiland)
- Are Children Wanted?
- A Study of Maternal Attitudes at the Onset of Pregnancy (A. Kalir)
- Caring for Children in Groups (H. Schaffer)
- The Influence of the Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome on Mother-Infant Interaction (K. Kaltenbach & L. Finnegan)
- Factors in the Etiology of Child and Adolescent Depression (G. Nissen)
- Adolescent Depression in an Eskimo Culture (M. Fischer)
- Children and the Multiple Trauma in a Disaster (M. Sugar)
- A Five-Year Follow-Up of Child Maltreatment Victims: Psychological Findings (S. Murphy).
by "Nielsen BookData"