This project will examine the effects of a parental marital disruption on the well-being of children. The central question to be addressed is the following: Why does divorce affect some children more than others? About one million American children per year experience a parental divorce, so the proposed topic is very relevant to the health and welfare of children. In this project, divorce is conceptualized as a process that may begin long before the physical separation of the parents and that may take diverse forms after the separation. Consequently, the effects of the divorce process on children's well-being will be examined in three large-scale, longitudinal studies, each of which includes detailed assessments of the well-being of children at two or more points in time, as well as information from the children's parents and other sources. In each study, the subjects to be analyzed will be those children who were in nondisrupted families at the time of the first child assessment. The well-being at later assessments of children whose families subsequently disrupted will then be compared to the well-being of children whose families remained intact. Within the disrupted group, variations in the post-disruption process (such as contact between the noncustodial parent and the child, or the remarriage of the custodial parent) will be examined. Of special note is that all analyses will include indicators that control for observed differences in well-being that already existed at the first (predisruption) assessment. Our statistical analyses will begin with simple regression models and hazard models. Then models that take into account self-selection into the disrupted and nondisrupted groups and sample selection bias will be estimated and evaluated. The three data sets are the National Child Development Study, 1958 Cohort, the Children's Assessment of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, and the National Survey of Children.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HD025936-01
Application #
3327208
Study Section
Social Sciences and Population Study Section (SSP)
Project Start
1989-08-01
Project End
1993-04-30
Budget Start
1989-08-01
Budget End
1990-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
045911138
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Coley, Rebekah Levine; Kull, Melissa A; Carrano, Jennifer (2014) Parental endorsement of spanking and children's internalizing and externalizing problems in African American and Hispanic families. J Fam Psychol 28:22-31
Coley, Rebekah Levine; Lombardi, Caitlin McPherran (2014) Low-income women's employment experiences and their financial, personal, and family well-being. J Fam Psychol 28:88-97
Coley, Rebekah Levine; Leventhal, Tama; Lynch, Alicia Doyle et al. (2013) Relations between housing characteristics and the well-being of low-income children and adolescents. Dev Psychol 49:1775-89
Coley, Rebekah Levine; Lombardi, Caitlin McPherran (2013) Does maternal employment following childbirth support or inhibit low-income children's long-term development? Child Dev 84:178-97
Bachman, Heather J; Coley, Rebekah Levine; Carrano, Jennifer (2012) Low-income mothers' patterns of partnership instability and adolescents' socioemotional well-being. J Fam Psychol 26:263-73
Burton, Linda M; Hardaway, Cecily R (2012) Low-income mothers as ""othermothers"" to their romantic partners' children: women's coparenting in multiple partner fertility relationships. Fam Process 51:343-59
Bachman, Heather J; Coley, Rebekah Levine; Carrano, Jennifer (2011) Maternal relationship instability influences on children's emotional and behavioral functioning in low-income families. J Abnorm Child Psychol 39:1149-61
Kraushaar, Daniel C; Yamaguchi, Yu; Wang, Lianchun (2010) Heparan sulfate is required for embryonic stem cells to exit from self-renewal. J Biol Chem 285:5907-16
Roche, Kathleen M; Leventhal, Tama (2009) Beyond neighborhood poverty: family management, neighborhood disorder, and adolescents' early sexual onset. J Fam Psychol 23:819-27
Cherlin, A J; Kiernan, K E; Chase-Lansdale, P L (1995) Parental divorce in childhood and demographic outcomes in young adulthood. Demography 32:299-318

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