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Divorce: A Psychosocial Study
A01=Shelley Day Sclater
Acute Psychological Distress
adult experiences of marital breakdown
Alison's Case
Alison’s Case
Author_Shelley Day Sclater
Category=JHBK
Category=JM
Changing Family Patterns
conflict resolution theory
Contemporary Society
Divorce Adjustment
Divorce Dispute
Divorce Dispute Resolution
Divorce Experiences
Divorce Mediation
Divorce Narratives
Divorce Stories
emotional coping mechanisms
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family law research
GHQ Data
GHQ Score
Julie Jessop
Laura's Case
Laura's Story
Laura’s Case
Laura’s Story
Lone Mothers
Paranoid Schizoid Ways
Personal Narratives Group
Post-divorce Family
Postdivorce Families
psychodynamic perspective
Psychological Coping Strategies
psychosocial analysis
qualitative interviews
Semi-structured Interview Data
Vice Versa
Welfare Discourse
Women's Emotional Health
Women’s Emotional Health
Product details
- ISBN 9781840149005
- Weight: 525g
- Dimensions: 153 x 219mm
- Publication Date: 22 Dec 1999
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Several jurisdictions have attempted to render divorce more harmonious by abolishing matrimonial 'fault' and facilitating the resolution of divorce disputes by mediation. In Britain, these provisions appear in the Family Law Act 1996. The book presents a challenge to the underlying assumptions that conflict and the adversarial system are undesirable. Its focus is on adults’ experiences of divorce. In a series of interviews, divorcing people told their own stories of divorce. The personal narratives revealed that divorce can be emotionally traumatic, but it has positive sides too. The emotions of divorce are not pathological, but are readily explicable as ordinary human coping strategies, in the context of the real material privations that many divorcing people suffer. These coping strategies often involve conflict and acrimony. From a psychodynamic perspective, it is argued that these are integral, and psychologically necessary, aspects of the divorce process. This book is particularly topical in the light of the recent decision of the British Government to postpone the implementation of the Family Law Act 1996 and the acknowledged need for research to inform policy.
Shelley Day Sclater, University of East London, UK
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