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] 205

I

Advancing Social Integration and

Intergenerational Solidarity

The role of youth in strengthening intergenerational solidarity within the family

1. Rossi, A. S., & Rossi, P. H., 1990

2. Spence and Radunovich, 2012

3. Cunningham, M., 2011

4. Butts, D.M., Thang, L. L. & Hatton-Yeo, A., 2013

5. For the World Youth Report 2005, visit:

http://undesadspd.org/

Youth/WorldProgrammeofActionforYouth/IntergenerationalIssues/

IntergenerationalIssuesWPAY.aspx

6. For an executive summary of the topic, visit:

http://way.org.my/youth-issues/youth-and-intergenerational-relations

7. For the complete outcome document, visit:

http://way.org.my/programoutcome/item/seoul-youth-declaration-the-22nd-

international-youth-forum-2012

8. EU poll, 2009 and Generations United, 2010

Empowering families to achieve lifelong education for all

1. UNESCO. ‘The Manukau Family Literacy Project’.

Effective Literacy

Programmes.

N.p., n.d. Web. 5 March 2014.

http://www.unesco.org/uil/

litbase/?menu=9&programme=114

2. UNESCO. ‘Community Learning Centres (CLCs)’.

UNESCO Office in Bangkok.

N.p., n.d. Web. 5 March 2014.

http://www.unescobkk.org/education/literacy-

and-lifelong-learning/community-learning-centres-clcs

3. UNESCO. ‘Community-based parenting education’.

UNESCO Office in Bangkok.

N.p., n.d. Web. 5 March 2014.

http://www.unescobkk.org/education/ecce/

activities/community-based-parenting-education

4. Consejería Presidencial para Programas Especiales. (n.d.). Descripción.

De cero

a siempre.

Retrieved 5 March 2014, from

http://www.deceroasiempre.gov.co/

QuienesSomos

Intergenerational solidarity: The springboard for societal well-being

1. Beauchemin et al.,

Cerebral Cortex

, Dec. 2010

2. Brizendine, Louann,

The Female Brain

. Morgan Road Books, 2006

Informal support in family life: A hidden gem for young people, community and society

1. Martin et al, 2012

2. Dolan and Brady, 2012

3. McGrath, 2012

Family law and Islam

1. Geertz, C. 1971.

Islam Observed: Religious Developments in Morocco and Indonesia.

Chicago: Chicago University Press

2. Charrad, M. M. 2011. ‘Gender in the Middle East: Islam, States, Agency,’

Annual

Review of Sociology

37: 417-37

3. Charrad M.M. 2001.

States and Women’s Rights: The Making of Postcolonial Tunisia,

Algeria, and Morocco.

Berkeley: University of California Press

4. Peirce L. 2003.

Morality Tales: Law and Gender in the Ottoman Court of Aintab.

Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 382. See also Tucker J.E. 2008.

Women, Family, and Gender in Islamic Law.

New York: Cambridge University Press

5. Quoted in Charrad, 2001. Op. Cit. P. 37

6. Quoted in Charrad, 2001. Op. Cit. P. 5.

7. Kelly S. and Breslin J. (eds.), 2010.

Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North

Africa: Progress Amid Resistance.

New York: Freedom House

8. Charrad, 2001. Op. Cit. Pp. 201-32.

The Arab family: Increasing vulnerability in times of transition

1. ESCWA, ‘Bridging the urban divide in the ESCWA region’,

Social Development

Bulletin,

vol. 3, issue 4, document E/ESCWA/SDD/2011/Technical Paper 3

2. World Bank (2011)

Study on the Impact and Costs of Forced

Displacement: State of the Art Literature Review.

Accessible from:

http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTSOCIALDEVELOPMENT/

Resources/244362-1265299949041/6766328-1265299960363/

VolumeIILiterature.pdf

3. Calculated from UN Habitat Urban Indicators Dataset for Indicator: Population

in Slums (% of Urban Population), latest data available. Dataset accessible from:

http://www.unhabitat.org/stats

4. PADCO; Community Development Group; and Iraqi Central Office of Statistics

(2006)

Iraq Housing Market Study – Main Report.

Accessible from: http://www.

unhabitat.org/downloads/docs/4997_65700_IHMS%20Main%20Report.pdf

5. UN-ESCWA (2012)

A review of literature on the changing role of the family in care

provision in Arab countries.

E/ESCWA/SDD/2013/WP.1

6. Ibid.

7. Ibid.

8. UNFPA (2012)

Women’s Need for Family Planning in Arab Countries,

Social Policy

Brief, accessible from:

http://www.unfpa.org/worldwide/family-planning-arab-

countries-2.pdf

9. UNESCO (2010)

Early Childhood Care and Education Regional Report:

Arab States.

Report submitted to the UNESCO World Conference on Early Childhood Care

and Education, Moscow Sept 2010

10. Centre for Studies on Ageing (2009),

Older Persons in Lebanon:

Voices of the

Caregivers, Policy Brief 1, November 2009. Accessible from:

http://www.csa.org

.

lb/cms/assets/csa%20publications/policy%20briefs%20pdfs/csa_policy_brief_

issue1_voices_of_the_care_givers.pdf

Further reading:

- UN-ESCWA (2013)

Report on the Electronic Discussion ‘Towards a New Welfare Mix

for the Arab Region?’

Outline of the Social Policy Report V. E/ESCWA/SDD/2013/

WG.2/Report

- UN-ESCWA (2013)

Arab forum: ‘Towards a new welfare mix: Rethinking the roles of

the state, market and civil society in the provision of basic social services’.

E/ESCWA/

SDD/2013/WG.1/Report

- UN-ESCWA (2011)

Bridging the Urban Divide in the ESCWA Region: Towards

Inclusive Cities.

E/ESCWA/SDD/2011/1

Advancing social integration and intergenerational solidarity

1.

International Journal of the Jurisprudence of the Family,

William S. Hein & Co. Inc

Social connectedness and youth development

1. Jose, P.E. & Pryor, J. (2010). ‘Does social connectedness lead to a greater sense of

well-being in New Zealand adolescents? Findings from the Youth Connectedness

Project’.

Psychology Aotearoa,

2 (2), 94-97

2. Jose, P.E., Ryan, N. & Pryor, J. (2012). ‘Does social connectedness promote

a greater sense of well-being in adolescence over time?’

Journal of Research on

Adolescence,

22(2), 235–251. doi:10.1111/j.1532-7795.2012.00783.x

3. At the three time points of measurement, cohort 1 participants were aged 10-11,

11-12 and 12-13 years, cohort 2 participants were aged 12-13, 13-14 and 14-15

years, and cohort 3 participants were aged 14-15, 15-16 and 16-17 years. Where

the cohorts overlapped during a time period, the grand mean was used.

4. This model controls for age, gender, ethnic group and initial levels of well-being.

Wh

ā

nau development and resilience

1. M

ā

ori Economic Development Panel (2012):

He Kai Kei Aku Ringa. The Crown-

M

ā

ori Economic Growth partnership.

Wellington. p. 12

2. Durie, M. (2003). Ng

ā

K

ā

hui Pou Launching M

ā

ori Futures. Huia Publishers,

Wellington. p. 70

3. Families Commission (2010-2012)

Te Pümautanga o te whänau: Tühoe and South

Auckland whänau,

Families Commission, Wellington

4. Tühoe Establishment Trust website. Retrieved 12 February 2011, from www.

ngaituhoe.iwi.nz

Further reading:

- Meredith, P. (2009). ‘Urban M

ā

ori’. Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.

Retrieved 5 February 2010, from

http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/urban-Maori

(updated 4 March 09)

Family-oriented policy

1. Van der berg, 2010

2. Streak et al, 2008

Bonding of the generations: Promoting family values and intergenerational

solidarity in Singapore

1. Ministry of Community Development (1999).

Report of the Inter-ministerial

Committee on the Aging Population,

Singapore, pages 177-178

2. Tan, Ern Ser (2012),

Class and Social Orientations in Singapore: Report based on

2011 Survey on Singapore Society.

(forthcoming e-publication)

3. Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (2009).

State of the Elderly

in Singapore, 2008/2009

. Release 3: Social Well-being, Going Forward. Table 4.10

Notes and References