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・ Single-grain experiment
・ Single-Handed
・ Single-Handed (TV series)
・ Single-handed sailing
・ Single-Handed Trans-Atlantic Race
・ Single-hander
・ Single-index model
・ Single-input single-output system
・ Single-instance storage
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・ Single occupancy
・ Single of the Weak
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Single parent
・ Single particle analysis
・ Single particle tracking
・ Single Payment Scheme
・ Single peaked preferences
・ Single person
・ Single Piece Flow
・ Single point (disambiguation)
・ Single point of failure
・ Single pot still whiskey
・ Single Princesses and Blind Dates
・ Single Resolution Mechanism
・ Single responsibility principle
・ Single rider
・ Single Room Furnished


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Single parent : ウィキペディア英語版
Single parent

A single parent, sometimes called a solo parent, is a parent, not living with a spouse or partner, who has most of the day-to-day responsibilities in raising the child or children. A single parent is usually considered the primary caregiver, meaning the parent the children have residency with the majority of the time. If the parents are separated or divorced, children live with their custodial parent and have visitation or secondary residence with their noncustodial parent. In western society in general, following separation, a child will end up with the primary caregiver, usually the mother, and a secondary caregiver, usually the father.
Historically, death of a partner was a major cause of single parenting. Single parenting can result from separation, death, divorce of a couple with children, or parents that never married.〔http://www.healthofchildren.com/S/Single-Parent-Families.html〕 Custody battles, awarded by the court or rationalized in other terms, determine who the child will spend majority of their time with. This affects children in many ways, and counseling is suggested for them. A mother is typically the primary caregiver in a single parent family structure because of divorce or unplanned pregnancy.
Fathers have been the less common primary caregiver in the recent past, presumably due to the father working most of the day resulting in less bonding with the children, or possibly a young child needing to still nurse, or if childcare was necessary while the father works, the mother would be seen to be better suited while fathers works. This scenario has shifted in recent years, as many fathers are taking an active parental role as a stay-at-home dad as more mothers are in the workforce and being the sole provider to the family, resulting in fathers bonding and connecting more to their children.
Before the 1950s the majority of single parent households were headed by the father and realizing the importance of a mother figure many would remarry. Remember all the stories growing up with the evil stepmother... The majority of deaths before that advent of modern medicine were from childbirth, infection or war.
Single parent adoption is sometimes an option for adults who want children but do not have a partner; another option could be to foster a child.
The demographics of single parenting show a general increase worldwide in children living in single parent homes. Single parenting has become a norm in the United States and is a trend found in multiple other countries. Debates concerning not only the single parents themselves, but also the children involved, support for the families in single parent households, and more have arisen. Although divorce is one of the main events that leads to single parenting, it may be that the majority of cases in the US are from pregnancy outside of wedlock.
==History==
Single parenthood has been common historically due to parental mortality rate (due to disease, wars and maternal mortality). Historical estimates indicate that in French, English, or Spanish villages in the 17th and 18th centuries at least one-third of children lost one of their parents during childhood; in 19th century Milan about half of all children lost at least one parent by age 20; in 19th century China almost one-third of boys had lost one parent or both by age 15.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Orphans )Divorce was generally rare historically (although this depends by culture and era), and divorce especially became very difficult to obtain after the fall of the Roman Empire, in Medieval Europe, due to strong involvement of ecclesiastical courts in family life (though annulment and other forms of separation were more common).〔''Kent's Commentaries on American Law'', p. 125, n. 1 (14th ed. 1896).〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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