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Jenkins, Stephen J.; And Others – Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 1993
Used retrospective accounts to compare adult children of alcoholics (ACOAs), adults who experienced stressful events in childhood not involving parental alcoholism (A-D+), and adults with no reported dysfunction in family of origin (A-D-) with regard to dysfunctional roles adopted as children. Dysfunctional role adoption was more frequent in ACOA…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Alcoholism, Family Characteristics, Parent Child Relationship

Brisbane, Francis L. – Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 1989
Uses data from 20 case studies of Black adult female children of alcoholic parents to discuss Family Hero role often assumed by oldest or only female child in Black alcoholism families. Explains how female-dominated survival role of Family Hero in Black families is significantly more related to racial and cultural factors than numbers alone may…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Alcoholism, Birth Order, Black Family
Mucowski, Richard; Hayden, Robert R. – 1988
When children are raised in an environment where alcoholism is prominent, certain dysfunctional responses are learned as a way to cope with the challenge of that environment. This study was conducted to examine the learning styles of adult children of alcoholics. Subjects were college freshmen and self-identified adult children of alcoholics…
Descriptors: Adult Children, Adults, Alcoholism, Cognitive Style
Weibel-Orlando, Joan C. – 1982
"Going home again," a financially secure return to the homeland in old age, is easily accomplished by, and constitutes an economically efficient strategy for, urban American Indian elders if they have maintained their ethnic identity. Emphasis on ethnicity varies with life stage: full immersion in early life, eclipsed ethnicity in middle…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Alcoholism, American Indians, Biographies