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Parenting During War.

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    War significantly impacts parenting, affecting child adjustment. This review highlights a lack of interventions for parents in war zones and proposes a new model for future research and support.

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    Area of Science:

    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • Child Development

    Background:

    • War profoundly affects family dynamics and parenting.
    • Children's well-being is intrinsically linked to parental functioning during conflict.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To review the effects of war on parenting.
    • To propose a novel family stress model for research and intervention development.
    • To identify gaps in parenting intervention research during wartime.

    Main Methods:

    • Literature review focusing on families in active war zones.
    • Inclusion criteria: parenting, child adjustment, and interventions during wartime.
    • Exclusion criteria: parental deployment without family residing in a war zone.

    Main Results:

    • Literature confirms war challenges parenting practices, cognitions, and emotions.
    • Evidence shows parental adaptations to living in war zones.
    • No published research on parenting intervention outcomes conducted *during* wartime was found.

    Conclusions:

    • A critical gap exists in research on supporting parents during active war.
    • Emerging literature identifies war's impact on parenting and intervention targets.
    • A proposed model can guide future research and intervention strategies for parenting in war zones.