For over forty years, New York based artist Judith Bernstein (b. 1942 Newark, NJ) has created expressive drawings and paintings that boldly address
the underlying psychological connection between warfare and sexual aggression.
For over forty years, Bernstein has been creating expressive drawings and paintings that boldly critique
the underlying psychological connection between warfare and sexual aggression.
Membership in a single - parent family or stepfamily is associated with increased levels of significant behavioral, emotional, and academic problems in children.1, 2 The mechanisms
underlying this
connection are likely to involve, among other factors, financial adversity, increased stress directly related to family transitions, and increased exposure to additional psychosocial risks.3, 4 Compared with the extensive research base connecting family type (ie, membership in a 2 - parent biological family, stepfamily, or single - parent family) and children's
psychological adjustment, little is known about the physical health consequences of membership in diverse family types.