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1.
Int Migr ; 37(4): 741-64, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12295608

ABSTRACT

PIP: This article addresses changes in gender roles among returning migrant families. It focuses on Greek returnees from the Federal Republic of Germany and explores changes in task sharing behavior and gender role attitudes resulting from changes in the sociocultural environments. A group of return migrants was compared with a group of non-migrants, both living in villages in the District of Drama, Greece. Groups were interviewed to investigate the extent to which each spouse shared house tasks, as well as their attitudes towards sharing and gender role in the family. The t-test for independent samples was used to determine mean differences between the two groups. In addition to demographic variables, those concerning the "time lived abroad" and the "number of years in Greece" after return were inserted into a series of regression analyses. Findings showed that migrants' task sharing and gender role attitudes were influenced differently by the migration-repatriation experience and subsequent cultural alternation. Results also suggest that migrant couples either take on new patterns of behavior or maintain traditional ones only when these were congruent with the financial aims of the family or can be integrated into living conditions in Greece upon return. Furthermore, migrants seem to adopt a more "traditional" attitude than non-migrants toward the participation of women in family decision making. From the study, it is suggested that gender role change is an on-going process influenced by the migration-repatriation experience, as well the factors, which accompany movement between the two countries.^ieng


Subject(s)
Attitude , Data Collection , Emigration and Immigration , Household Work , Interpersonal Relations , Transients and Migrants , Behavior , Demography , Developed Countries , Economics , Europe , Greece , Population , Population Dynamics , Psychology , Research , Sampling Studies , Social Behavior
2.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ; 32(2): 104-8, 1997 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9050352

ABSTRACT

In this study we examined the relationship between level of family burden and extent of psychological distress among family members of 52 psychiatric patients. Our sample consisted of 31 chronic and 21 subchronic patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. The paper focused on the influence of psychosocial factors, such as the sense of personal control and coping strategies upon the extent and the perception of burden. The carers of chronic patients more frequently used a passive way of coping with everyday problems. Passivity and variability on behalf of the carers were significantly correlated with areas of objective burden. Consistent with a stress-process model, we found that the factor of mastery correlated significantly with family burden and distress scores. The findings of the study are discussed in the context of community family interventions.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Cost of Illness , Family/psychology , Schizophrenia/nursing , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Acute Disease , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Chronic Disease , Female , Humans , Internal-External Control , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Psychological , Surveys and Questionnaires
3.
Int Migr ; 32(1): 29-47, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12287858

ABSTRACT

"The current study on Greek [migrants returning from working overseas] examines a wide range of social, economic and psychological factors that influenced decisions to return and processes of readjustment in the home environment.... This study concentrates on returner families and explores the extent to which they felt that the homeland had fulfilled their needs and expectations.... The main goal...was to explore interpersonal and socio-cultural, as well as socio-economic, aspects of readjustment." (SUMMARY IN FRE AND SPA)


Subject(s)
Acculturation , Decision Making , Emigration and Immigration , Interpersonal Relations , Population Dynamics , Psychology , Socioeconomic Factors , Transients and Migrants , Behavior , Demography , Developed Countries , Economics , Europe , Greece , Population , Social Change
4.
Int Migr ; 27(1): 49-67, 1989 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12281962

ABSTRACT

PIP: This study 1) investigates the social behaviors characterizing the interaction between migrants and nonmigrants in both home and host countries, and 2) measures directly the behavior of the child. 2 samples of Greek migrant children, 8-10 years old, were selected. The group from the home country came from 5 villages in the District of Drama in East Macedonia; the group from the receiving country came from 5 areas in the District of Baden-Wurtenberg in West Germany. All subjects were divided into 6 groups (including control groups), for a total of 133 children. The researcher paired each child with a classmate, matched for sex, age, class-achievement, friendship status and parents' financial situation, occupation, and educational level. The task assigned to the children, painting of a free choice theme, focused on children's interactional patterns. The 3 stages of the task were 1) pre-task interview, 2) the painting together of a common picture, and 3) post-interview. Coders categorized the children's behaviors as either friendly-cooperative or unfriendly-uncooperative and noted periods of working alone or working with the playmate. Interviews with mothers or mother substitutes supplemented the direct observation data. Using the Orthogonal Factor Analysis (Principal Factoring with Rotation), significant differences were found on 5 of the 7 composite variables: 1) submissive/friendly behavior, 2) assertive/friendly behavior, 3) assertive/unfriendly behavior, 4) initiative/opinion expression, and 5) solitary play behavior. Using data from the interviews with mothers and mother substitutes, significant differences were found on attention seeking behavior and dependence. Children who have always lived with their parents in West Germany (2nd generation migrants) present a submissive and friendly behavior towards the German playmates' unfriendly activities. Upon returning to the home country, the child is low in assertiveness/unfriendliness, which is a more neutral expression of submissiveness. Children who recently moved to join their grandparents in Greece scored low on initiative/opinion expression and assertiveness/friendliness. Mothers'/grandmothers' views about children's interactions were not always consistent with the actual interactions of the children. No sex differences existed in the direct observation of children's interactions with peers. Finally, type of family correlated significantly with child dependence.^ieng


Subject(s)
Child , Emigration and Immigration , Interpersonal Relations , Parents , Peer Group , Social Adjustment , Social Behavior , Transients and Migrants , Adolescent , Age Factors , Behavior , Communication , Demography , Developed Countries , Europe , Family Characteristics , Family Relations , Germany, West , Greece , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Population , Population Characteristics , Population Dynamics
5.
Int Migr ; 25(1): 73-86, 1987 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12268820

ABSTRACT

PIP: This study examines groups of Greek migrant mothers and their attitudes towards their children in different stages of the migratory process. There were 2 lots of samples of Greek migrants mothers who had at least 2 children 8-10 years old, 1 from the home country (5 villages of the District Drama in East Macedonia) and 1 from the receiving country (the area of Baden-Wurtenberg, where most of the migrants from East Macedonia are living). The 4 groups are: 1) 20 mothers who have always lived with their child in the host country; 2) 20 mothers who live in the host country where their child has joined them in the last 2-4 years; 3) 27 mothers who have lived in the host country with their child and have returned home in the last 2-4 years; and 4) 24 non-migrant mothers who have always lived with their families in the home country (control group). Women were interviewed using 2 questionnaires: a survey and an attitude questionnaire. The range of mothers' ages was 20-50 years. The youngest mothers were in the control group whereas group 1 mothers were the oldest. Groups 1 and 2 were mostly unskilled workers; groups 3 and 4 were mostly housewives. The returnees stayed in the host country a mean of 10 years, whereas the other 2 migrant groups were there 14.6 years. There were significantly fewer children in the families of groups 1 and 2 than 3 and 4. The attitude questionnaire covered the following child rearing practices: 1) training the child to participate in home duties; 2) keeping clean and tidy; 3) self-reliance and social behavior towards visitors; 4) ways of dealing with a child's obedience/disobedience; 5) dealing with favor-seeking behavior, food, and sleeping problems; and 6) mother's degree of permissiveness, supervision, and intervention on child's personal and interpersonal sphere of life. Findings show that moving from home to host country and coming back home creates the most controlling mothers, probably because mothers and children face anxiety-producing situations as they redefine family roles and readjust to the social environment. Returnees are as emotionally involved with their children as mothers who have always lived with their children in the host country. There are more similarities than differences between the 2 migrant groups. Both groups show similar attitudes to the control on 5 out of 7 composite variables. These findings suggest there is a strong cultural pattern in maternal attitudes which has not been affected by the sociocultural environment. The 2 groups of migrant mothers are similar to the returnees in their attitudes towards boys and girls except that returnees were more overprotective of boys than girls.^ieng


Subject(s)
Age Factors , Attitude , Behavior , Child Rearing , Child , Emigration and Immigration , Mothers , Social Behavior , Transients and Migrants , Adolescent , Demography , Developed Countries , Europe , Family Characteristics , Family Relations , Germany, West , Greece , Parents , Population , Population Characteristics , Population Dynamics , Psychology , Sex Factors
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