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45

2017

, יולי

18

גיליון

Becker, E. (2007).

The Denial of Death

. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Casey, L. (2011).

Review into the Needs of Families Bereaved by

Homicide. 

London: Commission for Victims and Witnesses.

Doka, K. (Ed.) (2002).

Disenfranchised grief: New directions, challenges,

and strategies for practice.

Champaign, IL: Research Press.

Espinosa, J., & Evans, W. N. (2013). Maternal bereavement: The

heightened mortality of mothers after the death of a child.

Economics

& Human Biology,

11: 371-381.

Lebel, U. (2014). “Second Class Loss”: Political Culture as a Recovery

Barrier - The Families of Terrorist Casualties’ Struggle for National

Honors, Recognition, and Belonging.

Death studies

, 38(1): 9-19.

Mahat-Shamir, M., & Leichtentritt, R. D. (2015). Israeli Mothers’ Meaning

Reconstruction in the Aftermath of Homicide.

Neimeyer, R. A. (2001). “Reauthoring Life Narrative: Grief Therapy as

Meaning Reconstruction

. Israel Journal of Psychiatry,

38: 171-183.

Rynearson, E. K. (2001).

Retelling Violent Death.

New York: Brunner-

Routledge.

Stroebe, M. S., & Stroebe, W. (1993). The mortality of bereavement:

A review. In M. S. Stroebe, W. Stroebe, & R. O. Hansson (Eds.),

Handbook of Bereavement: Theory, Research, and Intervention

(pp.

175-195). New York: Cambridge University Press.

Zimmermann, C., & Rodin, G. (2004). The denial of death thesis:

Sociological critique and implications for palliative care.

Palliative

Medicine, 

18(2): 121-128.