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RELATIONSHIP ISSUES AND TRENDS RELATIONSHIP ISSUES AND TRENDS

RELATIONSHIP ISSUES AND TRENDS - PowerPoint Presentation

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RELATIONSHIP ISSUES AND TRENDS - PPT Presentation

ISSUES AND TRENDS We will be discussion the following relationship issues andor trends INTERMARRIAGE SAMESEX RELATIONSHIPS INFIDELITY DIVORCE PARTNER VIOLENCE INTERMARRIAGE Means marriage between partners who are from different social racial religious ethnic or cultural backgrounds ID: 546148

shelters divorce sex women divorce shelters women sex violence canada marriage 2010 infidelity partner issues intermarriage relationships shelter abused

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

RELATIONSHIP ISSUES AND TRENDSSlide2

ISSUES AND TRENDS

We will be discussion the following relationship issues and/or trends:

INTERMARRIAGESAME-SEX RELATIONSHIPS

INFIDELITY

DIVORCE

PARTNER VIOLENCESlide3

INTERMARRIAGE

Means marriage between partners who are from different social, racial, religious, ethnic, or cultural backgrounds.

Intermarriage or heterogamy

is increasingly more common (esp. in Canada and in urban areas

)

452,000 couples in mixed unions in 2006; up 35% since 2001

Interfaith unions less likely among certain groups

WHAT CHALLENGES TO INTERMARRIAGE COUPLES FACE THAT OTHER COUPLES MAY NOT?Slide4

SAME-SEX RELATIONSHIPS

There has been an increasing acceptance of heterosexual cohabitation but there has been greater resistance in recognizing same sex relationships

1

st

same sex marriage ceremony took place in Canada on Jan 14, 2001 at the Metropolitan Community Church by Rev. Brent Hawkes (was not legally recognized) (p. 234-235 text)

Same sex marriage was not officially legalized in Canada until 2003.

Case Study

: Marc Hall-2002-Gr. 12 student who wanted to take his boyfriend to the prom. Durham Catholic School Board denied him that right.

Clips: Rev. Brent

Hawkes

and Marc HallSlide5

COUNTRIES WHERE SAME SEX MARRIAGES ARE LEGALIZED

BBC News, Apr 2013Slide6

INFIDELITY

Sexual fidelity remains an important value in intimate

relationshipsFunctionalists propose that society creates norms to ensure functions of society are met

Evolutionary psychologists state that it is inherent in the nature of humans to be unfaithful

-Helen Fischer and David Buss stated that early man was motivated to have several sexual partners to increase chance of

offspring;

The Monogamy Myth

(Vaughn, 1998)

Propinquity (Glass) or unmet needs (Anderson, 2001) can lead to infidelity

Most

Canadians today do not approve of extramarital affairs

.

Infidelity

results in divorce 65% of the time.

HOW HAS SOCIAL MEDIA IMPACTED INFIDELITY?

Ashley Madison Website (online dating for married

indiv

)

Tinder: Phone App to ‘hook up’Slide7

DIVORCE

IS a failure of marriage

Divorce was rare in the early 20th centuryIn recent years divorce rates have risen

3 PHASES TO DIVORCE

:

Awareness Phase

: One

indiv

. decides to initiate divorce

Separation Phase

: Plan breakup, settle temp custody & financial issues, notify people & separate households.

Recognition Phase

: 2

indiv

.

l

ive separate lives & negotiate permanent new parent roles and financial arrangements.

WHAT ARE SOME REASONS/RISKS FOR DIVORCE?Slide8

Divorce Act, 1985

-Provincial courts now had jurisdiction to decide on matters of divorce

-Grounds for divorce became more encompassing. No fault divorce based on the breakdown of the marriage was added.Slide9

PARTNER VIOLENCE

Both men and women are at risk of partner violence

Statistics show women experience more partner violence than men. ARE THESE STATS SKEWED? WHY OR WHY NOT?Some risk factors that have been shown to increase the likelihood of the occurrence of a partner violence situation

-unemployment -bankruptcy

-additional job -new child support

-demotion at work -etc…Slide10

CYCLE OF VIOLENCESlide11

Shelters for Abused Women in Canada

Stats Can, 2010

• In 2010, there were 593 shelters for abused women operating in Canada, 24 more than in 2008, the last time this information was collected. Large increases were noted in the number of second-stage housing facilities (up 11% or 11 shelters) and transition homes (up 8% or 22 facilities).

• The number of beds available to clients of shelters also increased. On April 15, 2010, there were 11,461 beds available in shelters across Canada, an increase of 7% from two years earlier.

• Between April 1, 2009 and March 31, 2010 there were over 64,500 admissions of women to shelters across Canada, up 5% from 2007/2008. Almost one-third (31%) of these women had stayed at the shelter before, up from one-quarter (25%) in 2007/2008.

• Among women staying in transition homes and other shelters on April 15, 2010, abuse was among the most common reasons for admissions (71%). Among abused women, most (67%) were looking for shelter from current partners, and most (60%) had not reported the abuse to police.

• One-quarter (25%) of all shelters reported serving an on-reserve population, and 64% of all shelters reported offering services sensitive to the needs of Aboriginal clients.Slide12

RE-ADMISSION STATS TO SHELTER FOR ABUSESlide13

PERCENTAGE OF WOMEN IN SHELTERSSlide14

AGE OF WOMEN IN SHELTERS