- Collection:
- Atlanta University and Clark Atlanta University Theses and Dissertations
- Title:
- An exploratory study of attitudes toward legal support and moral approval of abortion, and attitudes toward family, sex, gender-role issues among African-American and Caucasian female social work students, 1997
- Creator:
- Takamatsu, Yuki
- Date of Original:
- 1997-05-01
- Subject:
- Degrees, Academic
Dissertations, Academic - Location:
- United States, Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, 33.749, -84.38798
- Medium:
- theses
- Type:
- Text
- Format:
- application/pdf
- Description:
- The overall objective of this study was to examine African-American and Caucasian female social work students' attitudes toward legal and moral abortion, toward family, sex, gender-role issues, and their interactions. To attain this objective, the following areas on Afiican-American and Caucasian female social work students were addressed by the researcher: (a) their support oflegal abortion, (b) their moral approval of abortion, and (c) their attitudes toward family, sex, and gender-role issues. An exploratory descriptive research design was used in the study. A self administered questiormaire was given to 30 female social work students: 24 students of Clark Atlanta University and 6 of Georgia State University. Out of eight hypotheses, one on racial difference on legal support of abortion found that Afiican-Americans were less supportive oflegal abortion than Caucasians. Hypothesis on racial difference on moral approval of abortion found that Afiican-Americans were less supportive than Caucasians. Hypothesis on relation between legal support and moral approval of abortion found that there was a correlation between them, but the relation was stronger for African-American Hypothesis on family, sex, gender-role attitudes found that there was difference on those attitudes between African-American and Caucasian Hypothesis on correlation between family, sex, gender-role attitudes and legal and moral approval of abortion found that African-American's attitudes toward abortion were related to family and sex issues, while Caucasian's attitudes toward abortion were related to gender-role issues.
- External Identifiers:
- Metadata URL:
- http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/cau.td:1997_takamatsu_yuki
- Rights Holder:
- Clark Atlanta University
- Holding Institution:
- Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library
- Rights:
-