![]() Professor Schwartz's research continues to focus on marriages and families, socialization, nonmarital lifestyles, work, aging, and the structured relationships of race, class, and gender. She edited the union's newsletter, Universities 21, that is devoted to sharing ideas on academic issues. She served as union president at Northeastern and spent over eight years as the Legislative Director for the University Professionals of Illinois where she lobbied for bills of interest to higher education faculty and students. As a union activist, Professor Schwartz worked to win collective bargaining for higher education faculty in Illinois. Throughout her educational experiences, Professor Schwartz has been concerned with improving the academic climate for women, improving student access to higher education, and improving the quality of undergraduate education. She also served as a faculty consultant to the Network for the Dissemination of Curriculum Infusion, an organization that presents workshops nationally on how to integrate substance abuse prevention strategies into the college curriculum. She is Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Women's Studies and former Chair of the Sociology Department at Northeastern Illinois University, where she co-founded and was actively involved in the Women's Studies Program. She earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in Sociology and History from Alverno College in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, her Master's Degree in Sociology from the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, and her Doctorate in Sociology from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Mary Ann Schwartz has been married over 25 years. Applied material in the text encourages student involvement in the teaching-learning process and the emphasis on diversity helps students to understand the many forms of intimate relationships beyond the traditional. Marriages and Families, 4/e is comprehensive in terms of its inclusiveness, historical and theoretical content. "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.For courses in Marriage and Family found in departments of Sociology, Family Studies, Human Development, Home Economics, and Psychology. For anyone interested in marriage and family dynamics, including individuals, counselors, nurses, social workers, home economists, etc. Marriages and Families in the Twenty-first Century: U.S. The Process of Uncoupling: Divorce in the United States. Understanding Gender: Its Influence In Intimate Relationships. Ways of Studying and Explaining Marriages and Families. Features extensive boxed material accompanied by questions for personal reflection. It shows how contemporary families go well beyond the traditional, heterosexual, two-parent, white, middle class family and heterosexual legally-sanctioned marriage challenges the assumption that one culture's way of doing things is the “natural” or “right” way shows how marriage and family life have changed historically over time and from place to place and how political and economic globalization impacts families worldwide. Taking an historical, cross-cultural, and global approach, this book focuses on the link between social structure and the everyday lives of people's diverse experiences of marriages, families, and intimate relationships. ![]() The authors use a broad, inclusive approach, focusing on the link between social structure and their personal experiences of marriages, families, and intimate relationships. This text challenges students to become involved in a direct way in examining their personal belief systems and societal views of the many diverse forms that marriages and families have taken in the past and their evolution in the present.
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