Caught in the Cultural Lag: The Stigma of Singlehood.
... Because personal characteristics, such as race, sexual orientation, or health status, may also affect one’s experiences of interpersonal and institutional discrimination, we control for such characteristics in our analysis. In doing so, we can better pinpoint the effect of marital status on percepti ...
... Because personal characteristics, such as race, sexual orientation, or health status, may also affect one’s experiences of interpersonal and institutional discrimination, we control for such characteristics in our analysis. In doing so, we can better pinpoint the effect of marital status on percepti ...
HCCKotreview12006
... 19th century individual cultures homogeneous closely close the industrial west or large complex nations small scale groups in other nations questionnaires participant observation society culture Chap.2 Practicing Public Ethnocentrism Complex situations for anthropologists, subject to more than one e ...
... 19th century individual cultures homogeneous closely close the industrial west or large complex nations small scale groups in other nations questionnaires participant observation society culture Chap.2 Practicing Public Ethnocentrism Complex situations for anthropologists, subject to more than one e ...
Heterosexual Identity Development
... heterosexual identity that is not dependent on heterosexism. The fifth stage, internalization, includes an integration of one’s emerging identity into all aspects of life. Strengths and Limitations of the Existing Literature Until the publication of the works by Sullivan (1998) and Eliason (1995), t ...
... heterosexual identity that is not dependent on heterosexism. The fifth stage, internalization, includes an integration of one’s emerging identity into all aspects of life. Strengths and Limitations of the Existing Literature Until the publication of the works by Sullivan (1998) and Eliason (1995), t ...
Genetic variation in sexual and clonal lineages of
... not operate fast enough (except in very small populations) to be a sufficient explanation for the evolutionary persistence of sex. In the second mutation accumulation model, genetic drift may be important (although not required) in moving the clonal population to mutation-selection balance. However, ...
... not operate fast enough (except in very small populations) to be a sufficient explanation for the evolutionary persistence of sex. In the second mutation accumulation model, genetic drift may be important (although not required) in moving the clonal population to mutation-selection balance. However, ...
Standing Against Sexual Harassment
... reporting the incident or enduring the harassment in silence. The following is a list of some of the most serious unlawful employer actions that can confront victims of sexual harassment. 1. Loss of wages and benefits. When a victim objects to offensive behavior or resists sexual advances, she may b ...
... reporting the incident or enduring the harassment in silence. The following is a list of some of the most serious unlawful employer actions that can confront victims of sexual harassment. 1. Loss of wages and benefits. When a victim objects to offensive behavior or resists sexual advances, she may b ...
Structuralism
... Lévi-Strauss argued that kinship systems are based on the exchange of women between groups (a position known as 'alliance theory') as opposed to the 'descent'-based theory described by Edward Evans-Pritchard and Meyer Fortes. While replacing Marcel Mauss at his Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes chair ...
... Lévi-Strauss argued that kinship systems are based on the exchange of women between groups (a position known as 'alliance theory') as opposed to the 'descent'-based theory described by Edward Evans-Pritchard and Meyer Fortes. While replacing Marcel Mauss at his Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes chair ...
Responding to sexual harassment complaints: Effects of a dissolved
... workplace romance affect their decisions about ensuing sexual harassment complaints (Pierce et al., 2000; Summers & Myklebust, 1992). However, researchers have yet to provide a theoretical foundation from which to interpret this phenomenon. What is missing is a theory-based explanation for the underl ...
... workplace romance affect their decisions about ensuing sexual harassment complaints (Pierce et al., 2000; Summers & Myklebust, 1992). However, researchers have yet to provide a theoretical foundation from which to interpret this phenomenon. What is missing is a theory-based explanation for the underl ...
purging the genome with sexual selection: reducing
... Healthy males are likely to have higher mating success than unhealthy males because of differential expression of conditiondependent traits such as mate searching intensity, fighting ability, display vigor, and some types of exaggerated morphological characters. We therefore expect that most new mut ...
... Healthy males are likely to have higher mating success than unhealthy males because of differential expression of conditiondependent traits such as mate searching intensity, fighting ability, display vigor, and some types of exaggerated morphological characters. We therefore expect that most new mut ...
The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder
... not predictive of help seeking behavior, whereas having an erection problem was associated with a high probability of seeking treatment [14]. Focusing specifically on middle-aged and older men internationally, the Global Study of Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors studied 13,618 men aged 40–80 years fro ...
... not predictive of help seeking behavior, whereas having an erection problem was associated with a high probability of seeking treatment [14]. Focusing specifically on middle-aged and older men internationally, the Global Study of Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors studied 13,618 men aged 40–80 years fro ...
American Perceptions of Sexual Violence: A FrameWorks Research Report
... sexual violence are confusing. Experts argue that cultural ideas about sexuality set a context in which sexual violence can occur. The most significant and important aspect of the expert discourse on sexual violence is a consistent contextualization of the issue. In others words, experts explained w ...
... sexual violence are confusing. Experts argue that cultural ideas about sexuality set a context in which sexual violence can occur. The most significant and important aspect of the expert discourse on sexual violence is a consistent contextualization of the issue. In others words, experts explained w ...
AN ANTHROPOLOGY FOR THE FAMILY LAW OF INDIS
... sexual unions. It is no accident that when we are examining evidence about the links between adult sexual relationships and health, happiness, and historical choices, we are in a way searching for evidence about “truth” and “solidarity”: the truth about whether human nature is oriented toward stable ...
... sexual unions. It is no accident that when we are examining evidence about the links between adult sexual relationships and health, happiness, and historical choices, we are in a way searching for evidence about “truth” and “solidarity”: the truth about whether human nature is oriented toward stable ...
Marriage and Sexuality
... longings of the married person. Edna receives more knowledge on life, love and sexuality from these connections rather than from her husband. I also confront in this section Edna‟s initial state of ignorance in marriage and continuous development and access to knowledge through her extra-marital enc ...
... longings of the married person. Edna receives more knowledge on life, love and sexuality from these connections rather than from her husband. I also confront in this section Edna‟s initial state of ignorance in marriage and continuous development and access to knowledge through her extra-marital enc ...
“Hip to be Crip?” About Crip Theory, Sexuality and People with
... he calls ‘‘compulsory able-bodiedness’’ that he believes in itself produces disability. In the realm of the unspoken concerning the body’s abilities, a functional, able body is expected to be the norm [2]. Crip theory therefore criticizes the standards that maintain the boundaries of the ‘‘normate’’ ...
... he calls ‘‘compulsory able-bodiedness’’ that he believes in itself produces disability. In the realm of the unspoken concerning the body’s abilities, a functional, able body is expected to be the norm [2]. Crip theory therefore criticizes the standards that maintain the boundaries of the ‘‘normate’’ ...
Chapter 26A - Behavior Analysis, Autism, Procrastination
... “I know, Mr. Fields; please don’t joke with me. You are a psychologist, and I sure need your help.” “What do you want?” “I want to stop hurting. I want to feel good about myself. My dad hates me. My brother teases me and makes fun of me because I’m majoring in secretarial sciences. People beat me up ...
... “I know, Mr. Fields; please don’t joke with me. You are a psychologist, and I sure need your help.” “What do you want?” “I want to stop hurting. I want to feel good about myself. My dad hates me. My brother teases me and makes fun of me because I’m majoring in secretarial sciences. People beat me up ...
The Ethics (and Economics) of Tibetan Polyandry
... practiced it is due to “the large number of males and the much smaller number of females” (ibid.). All available evidence suggests that Desideri was wrong about both these reasons. There is no evidence that males ever substantially outnumbered females in Tibetan agricultural societies, and current d ...
... practiced it is due to “the large number of males and the much smaller number of females” (ibid.). All available evidence suggests that Desideri was wrong about both these reasons. There is no evidence that males ever substantially outnumbered females in Tibetan agricultural societies, and current d ...
Rethinking Relations: Queer Intimacies and Practices
... impossible, and “others” (Warner 1993: xxi). This system pervades all of social reality so that interpersonal relations and the social organization of contact are produced through and policed by their relation to normative meaning making processes of signification. Fundamentally constitutive of subj ...
... impossible, and “others” (Warner 1993: xxi). This system pervades all of social reality so that interpersonal relations and the social organization of contact are produced through and policed by their relation to normative meaning making processes of signification. Fundamentally constitutive of subj ...
Sexual Assault and SANE - Coastal Carolina University
... examinations. Evidence collection by SANE nurses can sometimes be seen as working for law enforcement, but this is not true. Evidence collected by SANE nurses can be beneficial to victims, but sometimes it can help the other side when a suspect is innocent and the suspect is not the one who committe ...
... examinations. Evidence collection by SANE nurses can sometimes be seen as working for law enforcement, but this is not true. Evidence collected by SANE nurses can be beneficial to victims, but sometimes it can help the other side when a suspect is innocent and the suspect is not the one who committe ...
Conditioning and Sexual Behavior: A Review
... a change in the frequency or effectiveness of a behavioral response as a result of contingent reinforcement or punishment (Ferster and Skinner, 1957; Kimble, 1961; Macintosh, 1974; Skinner, 1938). Response-contingent reinforcement (either “positive” in which an animal moves toward a reward or “negat ...
... a change in the frequency or effectiveness of a behavioral response as a result of contingent reinforcement or punishment (Ferster and Skinner, 1957; Kimble, 1961; Macintosh, 1974; Skinner, 1938). Response-contingent reinforcement (either “positive” in which an animal moves toward a reward or “negat ...
the Role of Anthropology in Development
... institutions” (Escobar 1991:666), and the abandonment of traditional methodologies in favour of less rigorous studies are not resolved, merely avoided. The truth is that for an anthropologist, working from within the development discourse will always be inherently compromising. Whether it is therefo ...
... institutions” (Escobar 1991:666), and the abandonment of traditional methodologies in favour of less rigorous studies are not resolved, merely avoided. The truth is that for an anthropologist, working from within the development discourse will always be inherently compromising. Whether it is therefo ...
Sexual Boundary Violations 2007 - Professional Standards Authority
... Clinical and therapeutic interventions inevitably render individual patients and clients vulnerable, and trust relies on providing a safe and boundaried space in which these can be carried out without compromising the person’s dignity and bodily integrity. Sexual boundary violations occur wherever a ...
... Clinical and therapeutic interventions inevitably render individual patients and clients vulnerable, and trust relies on providing a safe and boundaried space in which these can be carried out without compromising the person’s dignity and bodily integrity. Sexual boundary violations occur wherever a ...
- SlideBoom
... • Boas rejected evolutionary approaches in favor of cultural relativism. • Cultures are not “better” or “worse”; more or less advanced, etc. • Cultures must be understood on their own terms, not in relationship to other cultures. ...
... • Boas rejected evolutionary approaches in favor of cultural relativism. • Cultures are not “better” or “worse”; more or less advanced, etc. • Cultures must be understood on their own terms, not in relationship to other cultures. ...
Marital satisfaction is one of the important factors affecting women`s
... Today, infertility problem has become a social concern associated with a numerous psychological and social problems. This stressful and disappointing event affects interpersonal, social, marital, and sexual relations and may lead to psychological imbalance and even divorce (1). On the other hand, in ...
... Today, infertility problem has become a social concern associated with a numerous psychological and social problems. This stressful and disappointing event affects interpersonal, social, marital, and sexual relations and may lead to psychological imbalance and even divorce (1). On the other hand, in ...
Internal regulatory variables and the design of human motivation
... selection is the only antientropic force that builds functional machinery into organisms led to an important insight: Natural selection provides the underlying theories explaining why functional mechanisms in the species-typical architecture of the brain have the designs that they do (Tooby, Cosmide ...
... selection is the only antientropic force that builds functional machinery into organisms led to an important insight: Natural selection provides the underlying theories explaining why functional mechanisms in the species-typical architecture of the brain have the designs that they do (Tooby, Cosmide ...
Intergroup bias toward “Group X”
... bias because sex is considered as an essential part of life in contemporary Western societies (DePaulo & Morris, 2005). In fact, committed sexual relationships are widely considered the one “true” peer relationship and the only way to obtain “ideal sex” (in terms of quantity and quality; DePaulo & M ...
... bias because sex is considered as an essential part of life in contemporary Western societies (DePaulo & Morris, 2005). In fact, committed sexual relationships are widely considered the one “true” peer relationship and the only way to obtain “ideal sex” (in terms of quantity and quality; DePaulo & M ...
Chapter 3
... in Emerging Adults • Although emerging adults have sexual intercourse with more individuals than young adults, they have sex less frequently. Approximately 25 percent of emerging adults report having sexual intercourse only a couple of times a year or not at all (Michael & others, 1994). • Casual se ...
... in Emerging Adults • Although emerging adults have sexual intercourse with more individuals than young adults, they have sex less frequently. Approximately 25 percent of emerging adults report having sexual intercourse only a couple of times a year or not at all (Michael & others, 1994). • Casual se ...