Description

Book Synopsis
Asks bold and direct questions about parenthood in contemporary society

Trade Review
What is Parenthood? is an invaluable resource for anyone who wishes to think critically about modern parenthood and what the government can and should do to improve families. In bringing together eminent figures from different disciplines and from different political or cultural views about the family, it maintains an important dialogue about the best way forward. -- Brian Bix,Frederick W. Thomas Professor, University of Minnesota
I highly recommend this thought provoking and compelling book. It examines parenthood at a time when the concept of the family is radically changing, most notably stemming from the rise of single-parent households and divorced and blended families. And it proposes a number of intelligent and important solutions. After all, the long-term health of our representative democracy is dependent on our ability, as parents, to prepare our children for the future. -- Leah Ward Sears,former Chief Justice, Georgia Supreme Court
This book is a much needed model for how to bring civility and reason into the culture wars. It is a frank but non-polemical exploration of the science, ethics, and politics that affect our views about when and how we should regulate parenthoodone that opens up rather than shuts down the conversation. -- Katharine Bartlett,A. Kenneth Pye Professor of Law, Duke Law School
This book is a valuable contribution to a critically important, current societal debate on childrens rights with respect to who their parents are and the family structure in which they are reared. It should be read by all involved in that debate, and especially those who will decide on the law and social and public policy that will determine the future of the family and the family of the future. -- Margaret Somerville * International Journal of Jurisprudence of the Family *
Well-balanced consideration of two different views of parenthood as a social institution. * Choice *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Part I 1. Toward an Integrative Account of Parenthood 2. A Diversity Approach to Parenthood in Family Life and Family LawPart II 3. Uncoupling Marriage and Parenting 4. The Anthropological Case for the Integrative ModelPart III 5. Legal Parenthood, Natural and Legal Rights, and the Best Interests of the Child: An Integrative View 6. Family Diversity and the Rights of Parenthood Part IV 7. A Case for Integrated Parenthood 8. Developmental Outcomes for Children Raised by Lesbian and Gay Parents Part V 9. Biological and Psychological Dimensions of Integrative Attachments 10. Parenting Matters: An Attachment PerspectivePart VI 11. Gender and Parentage 12. Can Parenting Be Equal? Rethinking Equality and Gender Differences in ParentingPart VII 13. Transnationalism of the Heart: Familyhood across Borders 14. Transnational Mothering and Models of ParenthoodPart VIII 15. Of Human Bonding 16. The Other Side of the Demographic Revolution Epilogue About the Contributors Index

What Is Parenthood Contemporary Debates about

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    A Paperback / softback by Linda C. McClain, Daniel Cere

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      View other formats and editions of What Is Parenthood Contemporary Debates about by Linda C. McClain

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 14/01/2013
      ISBN13: 9780814759424, 978-0814759424
      ISBN10: 0814759424

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Asks bold and direct questions about parenthood in contemporary society

      Trade Review
      What is Parenthood? is an invaluable resource for anyone who wishes to think critically about modern parenthood and what the government can and should do to improve families. In bringing together eminent figures from different disciplines and from different political or cultural views about the family, it maintains an important dialogue about the best way forward. -- Brian Bix,Frederick W. Thomas Professor, University of Minnesota
      I highly recommend this thought provoking and compelling book. It examines parenthood at a time when the concept of the family is radically changing, most notably stemming from the rise of single-parent households and divorced and blended families. And it proposes a number of intelligent and important solutions. After all, the long-term health of our representative democracy is dependent on our ability, as parents, to prepare our children for the future. -- Leah Ward Sears,former Chief Justice, Georgia Supreme Court
      This book is a much needed model for how to bring civility and reason into the culture wars. It is a frank but non-polemical exploration of the science, ethics, and politics that affect our views about when and how we should regulate parenthoodone that opens up rather than shuts down the conversation. -- Katharine Bartlett,A. Kenneth Pye Professor of Law, Duke Law School
      This book is a valuable contribution to a critically important, current societal debate on childrens rights with respect to who their parents are and the family structure in which they are reared. It should be read by all involved in that debate, and especially those who will decide on the law and social and public policy that will determine the future of the family and the family of the future. -- Margaret Somerville * International Journal of Jurisprudence of the Family *
      Well-balanced consideration of two different views of parenthood as a social institution. * Choice *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction Part I 1. Toward an Integrative Account of Parenthood 2. A Diversity Approach to Parenthood in Family Life and Family LawPart II 3. Uncoupling Marriage and Parenting 4. The Anthropological Case for the Integrative ModelPart III 5. Legal Parenthood, Natural and Legal Rights, and the Best Interests of the Child: An Integrative View 6. Family Diversity and the Rights of Parenthood Part IV 7. A Case for Integrated Parenthood 8. Developmental Outcomes for Children Raised by Lesbian and Gay Parents Part V 9. Biological and Psychological Dimensions of Integrative Attachments 10. Parenting Matters: An Attachment PerspectivePart VI 11. Gender and Parentage 12. Can Parenting Be Equal? Rethinking Equality and Gender Differences in ParentingPart VII 13. Transnationalism of the Heart: Familyhood across Borders 14. Transnational Mothering and Models of ParenthoodPart VIII 15. Of Human Bonding 16. The Other Side of the Demographic Revolution Epilogue About the Contributors Index

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