Deana Grobe
Oregon State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Deana Grobe.
Journal of Aquatic Food Product Technology | 2002
Deana Grobe; Gilbert Sylvia; Michael T. Morrissey
Abstract A trend in new food product development is the growing participation of chefs within an organizational framework known as Culinology(r). Culinology(r) is defined as the fusion of culinary/chef skills and technical/scientific skills. Combining culinary expertise with food science is expected to produce more creative and financially successful products. This concept paper develops ideas for embedding the culinary framework into a broader interdisciplinary and multisector system for designing and developing new food products from publicly managed natural resources. Initial results from implementing the first stage of this framework are provided for West Coast albacore tuna.
Archive | 2012
Deana Grobe; Roberta B. Weber; Elizabeth E. Davis; Ellen K. Scott
Purpose – This study examines parents’ financial stress associated with obtaining care for young children while employed in unstable low-wage jobs. The child care subsidy program aims to both improve child care quality and support employment, and we expect that a substantial infusion of resources into this program would reduce parents’ financial stress. Methodology/approach – We use a mixed-methods research design to study parents’ financial costs of child care, how predictable the cost of child care is to a parent, and what strategies parents employ to manage child care costs. Findings – We find that parents perceive the subsidy program essential to their ability to manage the needs of their children and working. Yet, receiving subsidies does not appear to alleviate parents’ financial stress because child care costs continue to consume a large share of the familys income and subsidy policies make it difficult for parents to predict their portion of the costs. Parents manage the large and unpredictable expense of child care by decreasing other expenditures and increasing debt. Practical implications – Changing subsidy policies so they better fit the reality of these families’ lives could result in a more substantive stress reduction. States can reduce unpredictability by reducing and stabilizing participants’ child care cost burden and revising eligibility policy. Originality/value of paper – This research project fills an important gap in our knowledge about financial stress of low-income working families, provides insights into the role subsidy program participation plays in these parents’ lives, and informs discussion of subsidy policy.
Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal | 1997
Diane Williams Bohle; Deana Grobe; Geraldine I. Olson
This article develops a theoretical model explicitly addressing managerial style as an important component in the day-to-dayfunctioning offamilies. Managerial style is defined as the unique, particularized manner of response reflecting the self-definition and values of afamily manager. This theoretical model suggests that managerial style has meaning with respect to how family managers view themselves and their managerial behavior within thefamily. This model provides ways of explaining the complexity of family management; the dynamic, social character of communication patterns; the importance of context, roles, and resources; and conflict resolution within families.
Risk Analysis | 1999
Deana Grobe; Robin A. Douthitt; Lydia Zepeda
Journal of Consumer Affairs | 1995
Deana Grobe; Robin A. Douthitt
Early Childhood Education Journal | 2008
Deana Grobe; Roberta B. Weber; Elizabeth E. Davis
Journal of Consumer Affairs | 1999
Deana Grobe; Robin A. Douthitt; Lydia Zepeda
Strategy and Policy in the Food System: Emerging Issues, June 20-21, 1996, Washington, D.C. | 1997
Deana Grobe; Robin Douthitt; Lydia Zepeda
Children and Youth Services Review | 2014
Roberta B. Weber; Deana Grobe; Elizabeth E. Davis
Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy | 2010
Elizabeth E. Davis; Deana Grobe; Roberta B. Weber