What parent hasn't wondered "What do I do now?" as a baby cries or a  teenager glares? Making babies may come naturally, but knowing how to  raise them doesn't. As primatologist-turned-psychologist Harriet J.  Smith shows in this lively safari through the world of primates,  parenting by primates isn't instinctive, and that's just as true for  monkeys and apes as it is for humans. 
In this natural history of primate parenting, Smith compares parenting  by nonhuman and human primates. In a narrative rich with vivid anecdotes  derived from interviews with primatologists, from her own experience  breeding cottontop tamarin monkeys for over thirty years, and from her  clinical psychology practice, Smith describes the thousand and one ways  that primate mothers, fathers, grandparents, siblings, and even  babysitters care for their offspring, from infancy through young  adulthood. 
Smith learned the hard way that hand-raised cottontop tamarins often  mature into incompetent parents. Her observation of inadequate parenting  by cottontops plus her clinical work with troubled human families  sparked her interest in the process of how primates become "good-enough"  parents. The story of how she trained her tamarins to become adequate  parents lays the foundation for discussions about the crucial role of  early experience on parenting in primates, and how certain types of  experiences, such as anxiety and social isolation, can trigger  neglectful or abusive parenting. 
Smith reveals diverse strategies for parenting by primates, but she also  identifies parenting behaviors crucial to the survival and development  of primate youngsters that have stood the test of time.
Please appreciate my work to rock these links:
DepositFiles
TurboBit
FileSonic
Harriet J. Smith - Parenting for Primates
Labels: Animals related