Marriage at the Crossroads

Marriage at the Crossroads
Author: Marsha Garrison
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2012-10-15
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1139789457

The institution of marriage is at a crossroads. Across most of the industrialized world, unmarried cohabitation and nonmarital births have skyrocketed while marriage rates are at record lows. These trends mask a new, idealized vision of marriage as a marker of success as well as a growing class divide in childbearing behavior: the children of better educated, wealthier individuals continue to be born into relatively stable marital unions while the children of less educated, poorer individuals are increasingly born and raised in more fragile, nonmarital households. The interdisciplinary approach offered by this edited volume provides tools to inform the debate and to assist policy makers in resolving questions about marriage at a critical juncture. Drawing on the expertise of social scientists and legal scholars, the book will be a key text for anyone who seeks to understand marriage as a social institution and to evaluate proposals for marriage reform.

What Women Want

What Women Want
Author: Deborah L. Rhode
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2014
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0199348278

What Women Want comprehensively analyzes the challenges the feminist movement faces today and puts forward a new policy agenda for women.

101 Questions and Answers on Catholic Married Life

101 Questions and Answers on Catholic Married Life
Author: Catherine A. Johnston
Publisher: Paulist Press
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2014-05-14
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781616431532

Examines marriage as lived in the context of the Catholic community, which supports the couple spiritually, emotionally, and in many other ways.

Being Married, Doing Gender

Being Married, Doing Gender
Author: Caroline Dryden
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2014-02-25
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1317725115

In one of the first psychological studies of women in heterosexual relationships, Caroline Dryden examines the social context of their experiences and emotional struggles. Unlike the developmental literature in which women are studied only as mothers, or the clinical literature which has little theoretical basis, Being Married, Doing Gender places case study material in the context of the power balance between women and men. Caroline Dryden finds that there are contradictions between stereotypical gender roles and the maintenance of an equal partnership that can cause problems for both women and men. Being Married, Doing Gender will be valuable to students studying psychology or gender and women's studies and to marriage guidance counsellors and psychotherapists.

The Family and Christian Ethics

The Family and Christian Ethics
Author: Petruschka Schaafsma
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2023-08-10
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1009324616

Explores family not as a problem but as a mystery in order to understand its current controversial character.

The Renascent Bengal at the Crossroads

The Renascent Bengal at the Crossroads
Author: Narendranath Quanungo
Publisher:
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2001
Genre: Bengal (India)
ISBN:

Articles on Brahma-samaj movement and on the ideologies of the Ramakrishna Mission in 17th to early 19th century Bengal, India.

MARRIAGE FOR BETTER AND WORSE

MARRIAGE FOR BETTER AND WORSE
Author: Bukenya Siraje
Publisher: Bukenya Siraje
Total Pages: 304
Release:
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1312807105

We marry to be happy and have our companions with whom to live the rest of our lives in harmony. We get loved, have fun, children but at times things get bitter, we fail to cope with our partners’ behaviors who are drunkard, quarrelsome, abusive, fighting, and violent, only to hold on because we promised ourselves better and worse. A person meets the other having been from different places with different walks of life, it’s not easy to learn each other very fast especially when love is much at first sight. Couples met, and they, unlike their ancestors, married for love. Men and women were transformed into husbands and wives. Husbands assumed they were legally and culturally assigned the role of provider and protector. In exchange for providing shelter and putting food on the table, they exacted obedience and sexual submission and expected their wives to give birth and nurture children cheerfully. Wives willingly assumed their place in the domestic sphere, submitted to their husbands' rule in exchange for their protection, and ceased having an independent legal identity. But despite these rigid roles, they placed high expectations on the relationship: Wives hoped for a romantic, communicative, and fair-minded protector; husbands for a supportive, gentle, and loving companion. Marriages were fundamentally stable, but as the century progressed, expectations rose, and marital instability increased as those expectations went unfulfilled.

The Abolition of Christianity

The Abolition of Christianity
Author: Mark Walia
Publisher: Covenant Books, Inc.
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2022-05-26
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1638859817

Thanks to a wave of militant secularism now sweeping across America and the entire Western World, Traditional Christianity stands on the verge of destruction. Secularism has already triumphed on multiple fronts, be it abortion, euthanasia, homosexuality, or the "right" to sexual freedom, and aspires to further revolutionary changes, including elimination of marriage, the family, and gender itself. That is the provocative message set forth in Mark Walia's The Abolition of Christianity. Tailor-made for people of faith seeking to understand exactly why our culture has become so hostile towards Christian principles, this lively book will also appeal to anyone who enjoys controversial material on religion and politics.