: Angela Abela, Sue Vella, Suzanne Piscopo
: Couple Relationships in a Global Context Understanding Love and Intimacy Across Cultures
: Springer-Verlag
: 9783030377120
: 1
: CHF 61.60
:
: Soziologie
: English
: 443
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book examines the significance of the couple relationship in the 21st century, exploring in depth how couple relationships are changing in different parts of the world. It highlights global trends and cultural variations that are shaping couple relationships. The book discusses diverse relationships, such as intercultural couples, same sex couples, long distance couples, polygynous marriages, and later life couples. In addition, chapters offer suggestions for ways to best support couples through policy, clinical practices, and community support. The book also investigates aspects of a relationship that help predict fidelity and stability.

Topics featured in this book include:

  • Co ple relationships when one partner has an acquired physical disability.
  • Impact of smartphones on relationships.
  • Online dating and its implications for couple relationships.
  • Assess ent and intervention in situations of infidelity and non-monogamy.
  • Parenti g interventions for the transition from partnership to parenthood.
  • Online couple psychotherapy to support emotional links between long distance partners.

i>Couple Relationships in a Global Context is an essential resource for researchers, professors, and graduate students as well as clinicians and practitioners in family therapy, clinical psychology, general practice/family medicine, social work, and related psychology and medical disciplines.




Angela Abela, PhD, is a Professor and founding Head of the Department of Family Studies at the University of Malta, where she teaches clinical psychology and family therapy trainees, Master students in Family Studies, and supervises research. She chairs the National Centre for Family Research of the Malta Foundation for the Wellbeing of Society. As a clinical psychologist, family therapist and systemic supervisor she works with couples, children and their families and supervises practitioners working in this area.  She is a consultant for Parliament and the Maltese government. She is lead author of the Strategic Policy on Positive Parenting for Malta launched in 2016. Angela has served as an expert for the Council of Europe in the area of children and families for many years. Her research projects include studies on marital satisfaction, couple conflict and family violence, families living in poverty, lone parent families, parenting, and children in out-of-home care. In 2014, she co-editedContemporary Issues in Family Studies: Global Perspectives on Partnerships, Parenting and Support in a Changing World with Wiley-Blackwell and coauthoredIntervening after violence, Therapy for couples and familieswith Springer (2017). She is an associate editor ofClinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry,an international advisory editor ofContemporary Family Therapyand is on the editorial board ofChildren Australia.

Sue Vella, PhD, is a senior lecturer in the Department of Social Policy and Social Work at the University of Malta, where she lectures in social policy.   Prior to joining University, Sue had almost twenty years' experience in the public sector.  After graduating, she was a founder member of the Domestic Violence Unit in what is today known as the Foundation for Social Welfare Services.   She has since held top management positions at the Employment and Training Corporation and Malta Enterprise and has served on various organisational boards and policy committees.  She was a member of the EU's Employment Committee for seven years, including two years as Vice-President and Chair of the Committee's technical group.  Sue is currently a member of the National Centre for Family Research, Chairperson of the Church's Institute for Research in Malta, and a member of the Board of Trustees of Richmond Malta.  Her research interests include families, the mixed economy of care, housing, employment and migration, and has recently published on long-term care; poverty in the media; and wellbeing.

Suzanne Piscopo, PhD, is the founding Head of the Department of Health, Physical Education and Consumer Studies in the Faculty of Education, University of Malta. She is an Associate Professor in Nutrition, Family and Consumer Studies, mainly training prospective Home Economists, teachers and early childhood educators. Professor Piscopo is a Registered Nutritionist and Registered European Health Promotion Practitioner and is frequently invited as a guest speaker in school and community events and on the media, tackling subjects related to food, health, consumption and finance within the family and societal context. She is currently involved in various international and national projects addressing social determinants of health, the Mediterranean Diet, elderly health, prison health and sustainability education. Over the years, Professor Piscopo has been appointed to multiple national Councils and Advisory Committees. She is a member of the National Centre for Family Research within the Malta Foundation for the Wellbeing of Society and is co-researcher in studies on couple relationships and on access to quality food. 

Foreword6
Preface10
Acknowledgements12
Contents13
About the Editors16
About the Contributors18
Part I: The Significance of the Couple Relationship27
Chapter 1: Understanding Love Relationships in a Global Context: Supporting Couples Across Cultures28
1.1 Introduction28
1.2 The Influence of Culture on Couple Relationships29
1.3 Love and Intimacy Across Cultures30
1.4 Couple Diversity as a Hallmark of the Twenty-First Century32
1.5 Power and Gender in Couple Relationships Across Cultures35
1.6 The Impact of Technology and the Media on the Couple Relationship38
1.7 Supporting Couple Relationships39
1.8 Conclusion40
References40
Chapter 2: The Significance of the Couple Relationship in the Twenty-First Century43
2.1 Introduction43
2.1.1 The Rise in Singledom44
2.1.2 The Predominance of the Couple Relationship45
2.2 Good Quality Couple Relationships Enhance Well-being46
2.2.1 What Makes a Good Quality Couple Relationship46
2.2.2 Is There Such a Thing as a “Good Fit” in the Couple Relationship?47
2.3 How Do Couple Relationships Unfold?49
2.4 Children and the Couple Relationship50
2.4.1 The Desire for Children50
2.4.2 The Impact of the Couple Relationship on Children51
2.5 Couple Satisfaction over Time52
2.5.1 Older Couples53
2.6 The Fragility of the Couple Relationship53
2.7 The Meaning of Love and Intimacy55
2.8 Conclusion56
References56
Part II: How Couple Relationships Are Changing in Different Parts of the World62
Chapter 3: The Existential and Relational Meaning of Intimacy and Love for Couples in Scandinavia: Through a Lens of Scandinavian Fiction and Drama63
3.1 Introduction63
3.1.1 Scandinavia as Context63
3.1.2 A Scandinavian Discourse About Scandinavians?64
3.1.3 Sociopolitical Structures65
3.2 Courtly Love in Conflict with a Passionate–Romantic Discourse65
3.2.1 Historical Courtly Love and a more Contemporary Discourse of Love as Virtue66
3.2.2 The Intrigue: Courtly Love in Conflict with Passionate Being-in-Love67
3.2.3 The Romantic Dream—Encountering Modern Times, Liberation, and Progress Toward the “Pure Relationship”68
3.2.4 The Romantic Discourse Squeezed Between the Demands of Nostalgia and Desire for Liberty and Choice70
3.3 The Pure Relationship, the Plot, and Longing Depicted in the Swedish Novel, Willful Disregard71
3.3.1 Dialogical Love and the Emphasis on Being Seen as a Psychological–Relational Being73
3.4 Scandinavia Today: A Crucible of Discourses and Experiences and the Mo