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Family Conflicts

2014
Family conflict refers to active opposition between family members. Because of the nature of family ▶relationships, it can take a wide vari- ety of forms, including verbal, physical, sexual, financial, or psychological. Conflicts may involve different combinations of family mem- bers: it can be conflict within the couple or between parents and children
Marta, Elena, Alfieri, Sara
openaire   +2 more sources

Migration and Family Conflict

Family Process, 1979
The stages of the process of migration are described, with the implications of each for family conflict and appropriate therapeutic intervention.
openaire   +2 more sources

Family Conflict Tendency and ADHD

Psychological Reports, 2004
A lack of perseverance, poor attention, and poorly modulated behaviour are important criteria of Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD). Instructions often have to be repeated, sometimes even by different family members before a child with ADHD attends and complies. We hypothesised that a child with ADHD might cause less disagreement in families
H, Niederhofer   +2 more
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The dynamics of work-family conflict

Communications of the ACM, 2017
Conflict is averted by separating work and family time and responsibility, as reflected in millions of tweets.
Yili Liu, Lina Zhou
openaire   +1 more source

Marital conflict patterns: Links with family conflict and family members’perceptions of one another

Personal Relationships, 2000
AbstractThe goal of this study was to explore the effects of marital conflict on conflict patterns in the family, and on family members’perceptions of one another. Sixty‐eight two‐parent families with adolescent twins participated, with parents reporting on the conflict patterns used by the marital dyad, and by themselves in interaction with each of ...
Noller, Patricia   +3 more
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Conflict and Conflict Resolution in Families

1966
The conduct of human affairs, in contrast to progress in science and technology, has suffered from reliance upon generalities, superstitions, fallacies, and prejudices. There is all too little pertinent research concerning man’s relation to his fellows and few guides to aid in the attainment of creative, co-operative and mutually constructive ...
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Family cohesion, expressiveness and conflict in alcoholic families

British Journal of Addiction, 1990
SummaryThis study estimated family cohesiveness, expressiveness, and conflict in a primary care sample of alcoholics and non–alcoholics with and without a family history of alcoholism. Subjects completed the NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule alcohol subscale, based on DSM–III criteria, and a family environment scale.
K L, Barry, M F, Fleming
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Attitudinal and behavioral consequences of work‐family conflict and family‐work conflict

International Journal of Service Industry Management, 2008
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to develop and test a conceptual model to examine the effects of work‐family conflict, family‐work conflict, and emotional exhaustion on job performance and turnover intentions. The paper also aims to investigate the role of gender as a moderator of the posited relationships.Design/methodology/approachA sample of ...
Yavas, Ugur   +2 more
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Development and validation of work–family conflict and family–work conflict scales.

Journal of Applied Psychology, 1996
Researchers report on a 3-sample study that developed and validated short, self-report scales of work-family conflict (WFC) and family-work conflict (FWC). Using conceptualizations consistent with the current literature, the researchers offer content domains and definitions of the constructs.
Richard G. Netemeyer   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Conflict in Family Communication

2023
Conflict is a common experience in families. Although conflicts can be intense, most conflicts in families are about mundane issues such as housework, social life, schoolwork, or hygiene. Families’ negotiations over even such mundane topics, however, have important implications.
John P. Caughlin, Emily Gerlikovski
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