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Structure & Governance in 1978–79

The Counseling Section changed its name to the Family Therapy Section and voted to set up an award to recognize outstanding articles on family counseling, research, or theory and to recognize outstanding presentations in the Counseling Section’s annual conference programs. The International Section established its purposes as threefold: (1) to promote international research on families, (2) to facilitate communication among international family scholars, and (3) to foster a better understanding of family-related developments throughout the world. David  Baptiste was elected  by the Black Caucus and then appointed by the Board President to serve as liaison between the Caucus and the Board.  Note that […]

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1979 Conference: Everyday Life in Families: Past, Present, and Future

The Sheraton Hotel, Boston, was the location of the 1979 Annual Conference, August 14–18. The program chair was Barbara Settles, who chose “Everyday Life in Families: Past, Present and Future” as the theme. Tamara Hareven, Editor of the Journal of Family History, spoke on “Work and Family in Historical Perspective: The Changing Balance Between Family and Work.” The student members sponsored a session at which Charles V. Willie of Harvard University and William Julius Wilson of the University of Chicago debated on the topic of “Caste, Class, and Family Life Changes a Comparative Analysis.” Paul Glick gave his Presidential Address, entitled “Marriage […]

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Leadership in 1978–79

Paul C. Glick, the 36th President of NCFR, was a well-known family demographer. He worked for 40 years at the Bureau of the Census and was also a distinguished scholar and adjunct professor in the Department of Sociology at Arizona State University. He was born in 1911 and died in 2006 at the age of 95. An award was established in his honor at DePauw University. This award is given annually to a DePauw senior who has demonstrated academic excellence in the Sociology and Anthropology Department. In his Presidential Address, Glick made the following observations: NCFR members tend to follow the divorce patterns of […]

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