2020 Conference - Oral History Tribute to Dr. Robert Eugene Staples
Dr. Leanor Boulin Johnson
November 13, 2020
President Harry S. Truman speech to the 1948 White House National Conference on Family Life
truman-speech-1948-white-house-national-conference-family-life
1953 NCFR Annual Conference
A video featuring many of NCFR's earliest leaders (approximately 17 minutes).
1953-ncfr-annual-conference
1983 NCFR Pictorial History
Produced in 1983 and narrated by then NCFR president James Walters, this hour long vignette examines the history of the National Council on Family Relations through stories of the people within the organization.
James Walters
1983-ncfr-pictorial-history
NCFR Pathways, Past, Present and Future
<p>Historical overview of the National Council on Family Relations presented at the 75th annual NCFR Conference, November 8, 2013 in San Antonio, Texas.</p>
Mary Jo Czaplewski, Ph.D., CFLE, Emeritus NCFR Executive Director; Jason Samuels, NCFR Director of Innovation and Technology; Paul Amato, Ph.D., NCFR President 2013-2015
ncfr-pathways-past-present-future
Working with other professionals and participants is critical
We would encourage a more collaborative and co-created approach among feminist researches, practitioners, and those whose lives we seek to enhance.
Leigh Leslie, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Maryland, College Park & Donna Sollie, PhD, Assistant Provost, Auburn University
September 24, 2015
working-other-professionals-and-participants-critical
Which of these has a stronger link to becoming a perpetrator or victim of adult IPV: witnessing parental physical violence during childhood or experiencing childhood physical abuse?
Ericka Smith-Marek, Bryan Cafferky, Prerana Diharkidharka, Allen Mallory, Maria Dominguez, Jessica High, Sandra Stith, Marcos Mendez
February 01, 2016
which-these-has-stronger-link-becoming-perpetrator-or-victim-adult-ipv-witnessing-parental
What is Feminist Accountability?
We propose the concept of (more visible)feminist accountabilityas a way to work with and against, and to embrace, feelings of feminist fraudulence. To illustrate feeling like a feminist fraud and feminist accountability, and to explore how they are present in feminist family scholarship, we draw on our research experiences.
Elizabeth Sharp, PhD, Associate Professor, Texas Tech University and Shannon Weaver, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Connecticut
September 22, 2015
what-feminist-accountability
What does it mean to be a "scholar committed to social justice"?
As feminist family scholars, we need to continue to pursue social justice.
Elizabeth Sharp, PhD, Associate Professor, Texas Tech University and Shannon Weaver, PhD, Associate Professor, University of Connecticut
September 24, 2015
what-does-it-mean-be-scholar-committed-social-justice
What can we do to intervene to reduce the risk of child abuse and IPV in families?
Ericka Smith-Marek, Bryan Cafferky, Prerana Diharkidharka, Allen Mallory, Maria Dominguez, Jessica High, Sandra Stith, Marcos Mendez
February 03, 2016
what-can-we-do-intervene-reduce-risk-child-abuse-and-ipv-families