Discharge Pattern of Sibling Groupings: A Statistical Study of the Discharge Patterns of the Family Units Upon Termination of Their Placement at the Children's Center, Manhattan, 1952 and 1956

George Casimir Uzdavinis, Fordham University

Abstract

The family unit has long been recognized as the most intimate, most influential and most forceful institution in determining the attitudes, thinking and personality of the child. Even before the institution of matrimony, the family has existed in one form or another. Man was endowed with a natural and a primitive right of marriage from the very beginning, and the principal purpose of marriage was ordained by God’s authority. Thus we have the beginnings of the family. Considered both physiologically and psychologically man has a natural need for the matrimonial relation. This relation of man and woman has and involves duties and rights of both partners. In recent years the main functions of this union have been emphasized in relation to the children which are born to this union.

Subject Area

Theology|Individual & family studies|Social work

Recommended Citation

Uzdavinis, George Casimir, "Discharge Pattern of Sibling Groupings: A Statistical Study of the Discharge Patterns of the Family Units Upon Termination of Their Placement at the Children's Center, Manhattan, 1952 and 1956" (1958). ETD Collection for Fordham University. AAI30557753.
https://research.library.fordham.edu/dissertations/AAI30557753

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