rawing on grounded theory research with parents who brought children into their lives in non�traditional ways, this article considers how three UK-based single adoptive parents navigate a complex set of risks, benefits and limitations as they construct mutually beneficial connections, friendships and support networks online. The discussion draws on media scholarship suggesting that, in response to contemporary norms of constant connection, digital availability and online context ‘collapse’, many internet users appropriate the affordances of online platforms and technologies to maintain personal boundaries and keep social groups apart. I argue that such tight context control can be particularly important for single adoptive parent...
“Sharenting” is an internet trend in which parents report detailed information or repeatedly post pi...
Parents and children both construct narratives around what young people do online and why, and how t...
This paper reports on findings from a survey administered to a sample of 290 parents of children age...
Social media has dramatically changed the landscape facing families brought together through adoptio...
This paper reports on findings from an exploratory study on social media dilemmas (SMDs) mothers exp...
ABSTRACT While extensive research has investigated the risks of children sharing their personal info...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd There is a growing body of literature identifying the benefits for families from...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
In the field of international adoption, the popularity of the Internet has become an enabling enviro...
Contains fulltext : 167323.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)With the pres...
Parental sharing of child-related content on social network sites, termed “sharenting,” is often the...
Parents are increasingly sharing information about infants online in various forms and capacities. T...
This qualitative study of 77 individuals in 40 couples (same-sex and heterosexual), who had adopted ...
“Sharenting” is an internet trend in which parents report detailed information or repeatedly post pi...
Parents and children both construct narratives around what young people do online and why, and how t...
This paper reports on findings from a survey administered to a sample of 290 parents of children age...
Social media has dramatically changed the landscape facing families brought together through adoptio...
This paper reports on findings from an exploratory study on social media dilemmas (SMDs) mothers exp...
ABSTRACT While extensive research has investigated the risks of children sharing their personal info...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd There is a growing body of literature identifying the benefits for families from...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
In the field of international adoption, the popularity of the Internet has become an enabling enviro...
Contains fulltext : 167323.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)With the pres...
Parental sharing of child-related content on social network sites, termed “sharenting,” is often the...
Parents are increasingly sharing information about infants online in various forms and capacities. T...
This qualitative study of 77 individuals in 40 couples (same-sex and heterosexual), who had adopted ...
“Sharenting” is an internet trend in which parents report detailed information or repeatedly post pi...
Parents and children both construct narratives around what young people do online and why, and how t...
This paper reports on findings from a survey administered to a sample of 290 parents of children age...