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Öğe POSTTRAUMATIC GROWTH IN ADULTHOOD FOLLOWING CHILD, EARLY, AND FORCED MARRIAGES(Taylor and Francis, 2023) Zara, A.; Akbudak, Z.Child, early forced marriage (CEFM) is a gender-based harmful practice that disproportionately affects women and girls globally, preventing them from living their lives free of violence. The educational status and economic level of the family, domestic violence, sexist perspectives, and traditional practices formulate the environment that leads to the early marriage of girls. Early marriages strip these girls’ of their childhood, keep them away from their peers, cause them to discontinue their education, and trigger problems within their yet not fully formed social identities. Married children are subject to exploitation at home and become vulnerable to physical, sexual, and emotional domestic abuse, potentially leading to posttraumatic stress, postnatal depression, and possibly suicide. Posttraumatic Growth (PTG) in CEFM is a multidimensional process affected by perceived social support, psychological resilience, and coping strategies. Active coping, social support, and resilience can allow survivors to progress from a negative trajectory toward PTG. Understanding CEFM as a violation of children and a crime on individual, societal, and governmental levels provide opportunities for preventive precautions and timely interventions. Informed by the author’s community-based clinical studies and experience, this chapter discusses CEFM, its correlates and outcomes, and its relationships to PTG. © 2024 selection and editorial matter, Roni Berger.Öğe The Role of Extended Family Relations and Rituals in Family Resilience Following Loss of Mother to Cancer: A Case Study in Turkey(SAGE Publications Inc., 2023) Tanacıoğlu-Aydın, B.; Akmehmet-Şekerler, S.; Albayrak-Kaymak, D.; Zara, A.The loss of the mother leads to many changes in the family. The loss might have negative effects on the ones that are left behind. However, some family members do not show pathological symptoms; rather, they have healthy functioning despite their sad loss. Guided by the resilience perspective, this study illuminates the case of a Turkish family after the mother dies due to stomach cancer. The whole picture of a family after this loss was examined through using various data sources. Transcribed interviews with family members and teachers of two children in the family were investigated through thematic analysis, and five major themes were identified. Extended family relations and rituals, such as funeral services, meals after the funeral, or visiting the grave of the lost one, were found to be helpful toward positive grief experiences and resilience of the family members in the aftermath of the loss. This study was important in the sense that it gave an in-depth perspective of a Muslim family who lost the maternal parent, which is considered a person's most important attachment figure. © The Author(s) 2021.Öğe WORKING TOWARDS ENDING CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE: OPEN DOOR PROJECT(Springer, 2012) Zara, A.[Abstract Not Available]