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Oskin, Deborah L. – 1996
Hope has been theorized to be a stable cognitive mindset that develops over time, as children experience success at meeting challenges and in conquering obstacles to their goals (Snyder et al, 1994). To determine the effects of children's violence exposure, both as victims and as witnesses, to children's hope, 99 children living in violent areas…
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Defense Mechanisms, Early Adolescents
Schwartzman, Roy; Tibbles, David – Online Submission, 2005
This essay examines Presidential rhetoric and popular culture practices in light of the stages of grief enumerated by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. The authors find a consistent retrenchment of grief into the anger phase, where the pain of losing national invulnerability is transferred to externalized aggression. Reconciliation is suggested by means of…
Descriptors: Grief, Popular Culture, Coping, Terrorism
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Punamaki, Raija-Leena; Muhammed, Abbas Hedayiet; Abdulrahman, Hemen Ahmed – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
The aims were, first, to identify behavioural, cognitive, emotional, and social coping responses to traumatic and stressful situations, and second, to examine how the nature and severity of traumatic events are associated with coping dimensions. Third, the effectiveness of coping dimensions was evaluated for their ability to buffer the children's…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Tests, Coping, Foreign Countries
McNamee, Abigail S. – 1994
Many things stretch the bonds between caregiver and child, perhaps none more than war. Children's healthy illusions of their personal safety, well-being, and control of their environment is shattered. The resulting stresses cause varying levels and types of trauma, as well as varying mechanisms of coping. This paper explores the problems war…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Caregiver Role, Child Caregivers, Child Health