Alloparenting is when people other than a child’s mother and father help to raise them. Alloparent is derived from the Greek words 'allo' and 'parens.' Allo means "other," and parens means "parents." So alloparents mean other parents. Other caregivers may include family members or people in the community who are not related to the child. In humans, alloparenting is a common practice to help raise children. The people that take care of the children are called their alloparents.[1]
Humans have a very long infancy and childhood compared to other species. They depend on the adults around them. Adults need to provide children with shelter, food, water, education, love, and support. Children need people to take care of them for many years until they are older. Parents also pass down culture to their children and teach them all about life. They teach them traditions and how to act in the community. They rely on other people as they grow and learn new things. When the birth parents are not the regular caregivers, alloparents take over this role.
References
- ↑ "The Neurobiological Causes and Effects of Alloparenting".
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| Kinship terminology | |
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| Theories · Areas | |
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| Styles |
- Achievement ideology
- Atlas personality
- Attachment parenting
- Baby talk
- Buddha-like parenting
- Concerted cultivation
- Enmeshment
- Free-range parenting
- Gatekeeper parent
- Helicopter parent
- Nurturant parenting
- Slow parenting
- Soccer mom
- Strict father model
- Taking children seriously
- Theybie
- Tiger parenting
- Work at home parent
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| Techniques |
- After-school activity
- Allowance
- Bedtime
- Child care
- Co-sleeping
- Dishabituation
- Education
- Habituation
- Homeschooling
- Identification (psychology)
- Introjection
- Latchkey kid
- Moral development
- Normative social influence
- Parent management training
- Play (date)
- Role model
- Social integration
- Television
- The talk (race)
- The talk (sex education)
- Toy (educational)
- Positive Parenting Program
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| Child discipline |
- Blanket training
- Corporal punishment in the home
- Curfew
- Grounding
- Positive discipline
- Tactical ignoring
- Time-out
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| Abuse | |
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Legal and social aspects |
- Child custody
- Child support
- Cost of raising a child
- Deadbeat parent
- Disownment
- Family disruption
- Management of domestic violence
- Marriage
- Parental alienation
- Parental responsibility
- Paternity
- Shared parenting
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| Experts | |
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| Organizations |
- Families Need Fathers
- Mothers Apart from Their Children
- Mothers' Union
- National Childbirth Trust
- National Fatherhood Initiative
- National Parents Organization
- Parent–teacher association
- Parents Against Child Exploitation
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