Poor White single mothers and their children in non-urban communities in the American South experience high levels of domestic violence. We report selected findings from a life history study among White, low-income, unmarried mothers in South Carolina. Here, we examine how domestic violence in both childhood and adulthood may inhibit asset development by diminishing low-income single mothers’ accumulation of human and social capital, thus compromising their well-being as adults and parents.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Although research and social policy on domestic violence and poverty have largely focused on factors...
Despite evidence that individuals living in low-income and rural communities may be at heightened ri...
This study examined the association between maternal community violence exposure and parenting pract...
While domestic violence cuts across social groups defined by race, ethnicity, and economic circumsta...
Women, especially in female-headed households in Botswana, are living in poverty, despite the countr...
This study builds on a one-year pilot project conducted in a single county in Northern Mississippi a...
This research draws on a ten-month ethnography of a domestic violence shelter. While the central res...
Decades of research have demonstrated that parents and children living in poverty are at higher risk...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Sept 8, 2010).The entire t...
A common assumption in the literature on domestic violence1 is that women who are poor are more like...
The increase in female-headed single-parent families, and the high rates of poverty among them, caus...
This report aims to shed light on the most significant and persistent barriers to success, opportuni...
Analysis of a national study reveals that five-year-old poor children experiencing homelessness or r...
Although much research has been done over the past 20 years on violence by intimates, research on th...
This study examines why women form single parent households and how they maintain them in a rural co...
Although research and social policy on domestic violence and poverty have largely focused on factors...
Despite evidence that individuals living in low-income and rural communities may be at heightened ri...
This study examined the association between maternal community violence exposure and parenting pract...
While domestic violence cuts across social groups defined by race, ethnicity, and economic circumsta...
Women, especially in female-headed households in Botswana, are living in poverty, despite the countr...
This study builds on a one-year pilot project conducted in a single county in Northern Mississippi a...
This research draws on a ten-month ethnography of a domestic violence shelter. While the central res...
Decades of research have demonstrated that parents and children living in poverty are at higher risk...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Sept 8, 2010).The entire t...
A common assumption in the literature on domestic violence1 is that women who are poor are more like...
The increase in female-headed single-parent families, and the high rates of poverty among them, caus...
This report aims to shed light on the most significant and persistent barriers to success, opportuni...
Analysis of a national study reveals that five-year-old poor children experiencing homelessness or r...
Although much research has been done over the past 20 years on violence by intimates, research on th...
This study examines why women form single parent households and how they maintain them in a rural co...
Although research and social policy on domestic violence and poverty have largely focused on factors...
Despite evidence that individuals living in low-income and rural communities may be at heightened ri...
This study examined the association between maternal community violence exposure and parenting pract...