“…These workers represent a highly mobile group, who are frequently regarded as rowdy, undisciplined, and generally troublesome (Brealey, 1980;Gribbin & Thomson, 1980). The married men, in this case living in designated caravan (i.e., mobile home) parks, are considered the stable component of the work force, although their longevity in the job may be influenced by their wives' and their own views of residential life at the work site (Syme, Illingworth, Eaton, & Kantola, 1981). The mythical characterization of the itinerant workers' wives is of a group riddled with social and mental health problems, conditions either causally linked to or exacerbated by their isolated residence (Burvill, 1975;Jones, Gribbin, & Brealey, 1981;Oeser, 1976).…”