Silent sacrifices: The impact of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" on lesbian and gay military families
The image of the heroes' homecoming for those returning from war has become quintessential Americana.
The image of the heroes' homecoming for those returning from war has become quintessential Americana.
Objectives: Operation Building Resilience and Valuing Empowered Families (OBF) is a preventive, preclinical program that was developed by the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center's Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Service
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system's leadership has endorsed family involvement in veterans' mental health care as an important component of treatment.
Recent studies have confirmed that repeated wartime deployment of a parent exacts a toll on military children and families and that the quality and functionality of familial relations is linked to force preservation and readines
This theoretical article examines a case study of a military family and the family's involvement with Child Protective Services.
Military families have experienced the emotional trauma of deployment on an unprecedented scale since the end of the Gulf War.
LGB military families will be increasingly visible now that Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell has been repealed, and the military has stated that these servicemembers and their families are to be treated equally.
The well-being of military children and families in the United States has far-reaching signifcance for the nation as a whole, in addition to its importance for military capabilities and individual service
This commentary highlights conceptual themes in the opening section of this special issue on military families in relation to a new synthesis of developmental systems theory that emerged from developmental, ecological, and famil
This study evaluates whether the New Beginnings Program (NBP), a parenting intervention for divorced mothers, led to positive parenting attitudes in young adult offspring.