Friday, September 24, 2010

Canadian parents more lenient than Italians and French

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Canadian parents are more lenient with their children than mothers and fathers in France and Italy, according to a new study.
Researchers from the University of Montreal, the University of Rennes in France and the University Cattolica del Sacro Cuore in Italy discovered that Canadians are tolerant, Italians are demanding and the French are somewhere between the two.
"Our most important finding was the difference between Canadians and the others." said Professor Michel Claes, of the University of Montreal.
"Canadians focus on independence and negotiation. On the other hand, Italians, for example, have more constraining practices and exercise more control. We found Canadians seem to focus on negotiation in the case of conflict," he added.
Claes said Canada, France and Italy were selected for the study because they share important cultural and social factors.
"We chose French-Canadians because they share the same language as France, and originally came from France and share certain values. Italy was included because it was considered to have similar, strong, important family values," he explained.
The researchers, who published the findings in the Journal of Adolescence, examined the emotional bond between parents and their children by questioning 1,256 students aged 11 to 19 years old.
Canadian students reported less control and more permissive disciplinary actions, according to the study. Italian parents were constraining, stricter and more demanding and French parents were somewhere in the middle.
Claes attributes Canadian parents' perceived leniency to differences in education in France and Italy.
"North America has its own democratic and educational values, which promote individualization. Tolerance and comprehension are encouraged, and we exclude systems of coercive control. Italy, on the other hand, promotes respect of authority, control, and the need for permission," he said.
Children from all three countries described their mothers as warm and communicative. Italian and Canadian children had similar feelings about their fathers and reported high levels of emotional bonding. But French fathers were generally perceived by their children as being more distant and confrontational.
"We were surprised by this," Claes admitted. "It seems as though the relationships of French mothers with their children were becoming closer over time, while fathers maintain a form of distance and coldness that is more of a source of conflict in France than in the other countries."
The study also found that boys faced considerably more discipline from parents, who were also less tolerant of their sons' friend-related activities.
Claes suggests that male children were perceived by their parents as being more likely to engage in bad behavior.
"It's a universal observation that boys are often hyperactive, especially at a young age and have more troubles in adolescence. Girls are more internalized, and have more problems such as depression and anxiety. Boys are externalized. You would find this holds true even in Japan and China. It's universal," he added.
(Editing by Patricia Reaney)


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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Man bites police over a pet peeve

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Police arrested an 82-year-old man after he bit and kicked officers who had arrived to mediate in a dispute with a neighbor over a domestic pet.
The officers arrived at his house in the central Dutch village of Nijkerk to talk to the neighbor when the man was leaving on his bicycle, police said.
Asked to identify himself, the man got off his bike and started to kick and bite the officers, police said Thursday. The man was taken to thepolice station and was released after questioning.
(Reporting by Marcel Michelson, editing by Paul Casciato)

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Chinese pilots who faked resumes back in the air

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese pilots who had lied about their flying experience have been allowed to return to work after they took remedial action to make up their hours, according to the country's aviation watchdog.
Chinese media reported this month that a probe in 2008 had found about 200 pilots had falsified elements of their resumes.
The Civil Aviation Administration of China said they had found 192 pilots whose "flying experience to different degrees did not accord with reality."
Some had their licenses revoked, but others were given the chance to retrain and had been allowed to fly once more, the regulator said in a statement on its website (www.caac.gov.cn) late Wednesday.
"Those pilots given compulsory retraining were, after a thorough inspection of their qualifications, allowed to resume their posts," it said, without naming the airlines involved or how many pilots had been allowed back to work.
Following the incident, the regulator said it had tightened procedures to ensure the problem would not happen again, and that it would not tolerate such falsification.
The official Xinhua news agency said that with the rapid expansion of the aviation sector in China, "airlines turn a blind eye to fake records since they are happy to see more pilots certified by the administrative agency."
China's aviation industry was jolted by an accident in the northeast of the country last month in which 42 people died when a Henan Airlines jet crashed short of the runway.
Until that crash, there had been no other major accident as a result of stricter safety rules and relatively young fleets of mainly Western-made aircraft.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Chris Lewis and Sanjeev Miglani)

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Fines of $7 in "tough" new China anti-smoking rules

BEIJING (Reuters) – China's "toughest" ever smoking ban which aims to stop people lighting up during November's Asian Games will carry fines of $7 (£4.5), state media said on Wednesday, a limited deterrent to smokers in one of China's richest cities.
People found smoking in offices, conference halls, elevators and certain other public spaces will be fined 50 yuan ($7.36), though "businesses not meeting their obligations" will be fined up to 30,000 yuan, the official Xinhua news agency said, calling it "the nation's toughest smoking ban."
Guangzhou is one of China's wealthiest cities, with a per capita GDP of more than $10,000, so individual 50 yuan fines are unlikely to have much impact on most residents unless there are armies of enforcers combing the city.
The fines may be raised in the future though, Xinhua added.
Smoking is a national pastime in China, with more than half of men indulging in the habit.
A million people die each year from smoking-related illnesses, yet China's Ministry of Health only banned smoking in hospitals this May. No-smoking signs are routinely ignored throughout the country.
Less smoking could reduce smoking-related health costs, but would also hurt government revenues, as thetobacco industry still provides nearly one-tenth of China's tax revenues.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Sugita Katyal)


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Monday, September 20, 2010

Florida race drops Che Guevara image after outcry

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Organizers of an irreverent Florida auto race that used Che Guevara's image in its logo have dropped the Cuban revolutionary from promotional materials after public outcry.
They're also changing the title from the previous "24 Hours of Cuba of the North."
The December event at Palm Beach International Raceway is part of a national, tongue-in-cheek racing circuit whose entries cost less than $500. Most have zany names and emblems — like the "Southern Discomfort 2010" in South Carolina, whose logo features a cartoon hillbilly.
For many in Florida's native Cuban community, the image of Guevara with racing goggles around his neck crossed the boundary of good taste.
Officials tell The Palm Beach Post they're working on a new name and emblem.
___
Information from: The Palm Beach Post, http://www.pbpost.com


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