Real Issues No. 277 – Fathers
Real Issues No. 277 – Fathers, Separatism, Ethics Maxim Institute - real issues - No. 277
1 November 2007 www.maxim.org.nz
Going Further With Fathers released Peters sideswipes separatism Pandora's Box: When science overturns ethics
IN THE NEWS Sedition repeal surges ahead Attorney-General to be taken to Court
Going Further With Fathers Released
The Maxim Institute today released a new research report, Going Further With Fathers: Can fathers make unique contributions to the lives of their children? The report, primarily comprised of a literature review, found that if a father is actively involved in the lives of his children, he can help improve their outcomes in a range of areas, including their educational achievement, psychological well-being and their pro-social behaviour. Crucially, fathers have to go beyond being merely present to positively affect their children.
The report's findings are much needed. What it means to be a father and levels of father involvement have changed in recent generations. Some children may benefit from a type of active involvement uncommon in the past. Contemporary moves away from gender-stereotyped roles mean fathers have, in many ways, more freedom to be involved with their children than ever before. However, others see very little of their fathers. In such an environment it is worth asking what barriers fathers face to being involved with their children and how can some of these be overcome.
The best available research shows that children with involved and responsive fathers tend to have better psychological well-being, fewer behavioural problems, achieve better at school, have higher self-esteem and are more likely to connect well with other children, than those who do not experience active father involvement. These findings remain significant after controlling for mother involvement and a range of related social factors.
The ways in which fathers can benefit their children include pathways such as their childcare; being close to, and supportive of, them; and by playing with their children in sensitive and challenging ways. Fathers' involvement seems particularly important during the teenage years. Fathers and mothers are both able to make unique contributions to their children's well-being, but it also appears from the research that the combined input of both parents has an additional positive impact.
Taken together, the findings summarised in this report have certain implications for the way we should view fathers. Fathers should be viewed as parents in their own right, rather than merely support people for mothers. We should also be aware of the impact negative father stereotypes in the media can have on society. Most of all, in a country with some of the longest working hours in the OECD, fathers should be encouraged to make spending time actively involved with their children a priority.
Read
Going Further With Fathers: Can fathers contribute uniquely
to the lives of their children?
Watch
Alex Penk talking about the report on TVNZ's Breakfast
programme this morning
Read
a New Zealand Herald article on the report
Peters Sideswipes Separatism The latest season of
party conferences has revealed differences about how we
understand society. New Zealand First party leader, Winston
Peters, delivered a controversial speech to his party last
weekend in Taupo. His speech suggested that race is
undermining a common understanding of what it means to be a
New Zealander; and that this trend is even having an effect
on how we think matters and people should be represented in
government and society. In his speech Mr Peters raised
concerns about a growing desire for separatism among some
groups of people in New Zealand. Mr Peters highlighted the
group of people allegedly running military-style training
camps near Ruatoki, as well as the portion of the community
that had protested against the arrest of Tame Iti, one of
the alleged ring-leaders of the group, as being symptomatic
of separatism. In a veiled reference to the Maori Party, Mr
Peters also questioned why 'a political party based solely
on race is held up as the moral compass for the country,'
and called for Maori to fight 'militant separatism.' Dr Pita
Sharples, co-leader of the Maori Party, strongly denied this
allegation, responding that the Maori Party represents the
concerns of mainstream Maori, is based on Maori values and
the Party also has non-Maori members. The debate which has
broken out between Mr Peters and Dr Sharples is telling. It
shows the condition that New Zealand politics and society
has fallen into. The debate highlights a very real problem
that more and more sectional interests are determining our
approach to government, influencing how we should decide
what is fair for various people in society. Paradoxically,
however, interest group politics and its expression through
minor political parties -- like the Maori Party, the Green
Party, Christian parties and even the four Maori seats in
Parliament -- actually erodes the basis for an entire
community to realise the common good of everyone: which is
the shared understanding of memory, heritage, customs and
tradition that binds us together, defining who we are as New
Zealanders. That means the common good of the whole country
is greater than what different interest groups think is best
for them. In matters of government, our leaders should
represent us with a view to upholding the common good.
Separatism has the potential to undermine the foundations of
our country. Pandora's Box: When Science Overturns
Ethics Stories of babies in the UK being aborted for
minor defects such as webbed toes and the British
government's much documented attempts to legalise
human-animal hybrids continue to generate a storm of
controversy. As science provides new possibilities -- such
as scanning for diseases in unborn babies, creating
inter-species embryos and using embryonic stem cells to find
cures for various diseases -- it is sometimes difficult to
step back and consider that just because we can do something
does not mean we should. Science has given contemporary
human beings unimagined benefits -- a greater quality and
length of life and more reliable medical technology than
perhaps at any time in history. Science vowed to the service
of mankind, the care of the sick and the amelioration of
human ills is a noble thing indeed. But science by its
nature can only tell us what we may do, what it is possible
for us to do. And the history of the modern age has also
shown us that what we may do can go badly wrong. Science can
be put to horribly destructive ends: Hiroshima and mustard
gas, to name two. Even science aiming at noble ends, such as
the curing of the sick, ought to be governed and bridled by
a clear idea of what it is right to do, what we ought to be
doing. The ends do not justify the means. We live in a
climate in which the stakes are high: the debate on
inter-species embryos is about what it means to be a human
being; the very definition of human-ness itself. Doom-sayers
objected to vaccination and dissection and organ
transplantation, but the consequences of contemporary debate
on issues like embryonic stem cell research, or human-animal
hybrids are much higher. If we get this wrong, we alter the
very fabric of ourselves. This is why it is so concerning to
see such a blithe assumption and belief in the self-evident
virtue of scientific progress, and so little humility not
just before traditional assumptions about human dignity, but
before even ourselves. Despite alleged 'strict controls,'
science slipping its bridle means limitless possibility, but
also limitless hubris. Without a transcendent and
objective ethic, and a clear idea of human dignity
controlling scientific research and development, we end up
making morality by opinion poll, and opening Pandora's Box
to enormities and monstrosities our ancestors faced only in
their nightmares. We should think very hard before letting
the bridle loosen. In The News Sedition Repeal
Surges Ahead The Crimes (Repeal of Seditious Offences)
Amendment Bill has passed both its second and third readings
in Parliament within the space of less than a week. The Bill
passed its second reading by 109 votes to 7 on 18 October,
and then went on to pass its third reading by 114 votes to 7
on 24 October. The Bill will remove the offences of sedition
from the Crimes Act 1961, which includes encouraging or
inciting the public in acts of violence or lawlessness
against those in positions of authority. New Zealand First
was the only party to vote against the Bill at both
readings, a change from the first reading where the vote in
favour was unanimous. By repealing seditious offences,
rather than amending the current law to make it more
restrictive, Parliament has abolished what was an important
recognition of the value of New Zealand's common
institutions. Read the Crimes (Repeal of Seditious
Offences) Amendment Bill
Attorney-General To Be Taken To Court A claim has been
lodged in the High Court this week, asserting that the
Attorney General was wrong not to warn Parliament that the
Electoral Finance Bill, if passed, would breach the Bill of
Rights Act 1990. A joint effort by the National President of
Grey Power, the Sensible Sentencing Trust, ACT leader Rodney
Hide and Auckland businessman John Boscawen, the claim hopes
for confirmation from the Court that this law, which
purports to enhance accountability and transparency in
electoral financing, would instead contravene fundamental
democratic rights protected under the Act. 'Parliament needs
to know that the law they are about to pass could trample
over basic democratic rights. The Attorney General should
have waved this as a red flag right from the
beginning.' Talking Point 'When fathers are
supportive, involved and close to their children, there is a
positive and unique association with their children's
happiness, attachment, self-esteem and perceptions of
self-competence.' Daniel Lees, Researcher, Maxim
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