The Impact of Family Structure and Family change on Child Outcomes: A Personal Reading of the Research Literature
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Abstract
Introduction
Parental Separation and Child Outcomes
Remarriage and Child Outcomes
Multiple Family Transitions
Short-Term and Long-Term Impacts
Mechanisms That Link Parental Separation to Child Outcomes
Selection Effects
Genetic Transmission Mechanisms
An Exemplar Intervention: The New Beginnings Program
Concluding Remarks
References
Ross Mackay
Ministry of Social Development
Abstract
The paper provides a brief overview of the research literature on the impacts of family structure and family change on child outcomes, with a particular focus on parental separation. It takes as a starting point the existence of pervasive associations between family change and child outcomes and addresses a range of issues that are examined in the research literature. Do family changes primarily have short-term impacts on children, or do they also have more enduring impacts? How does remarriage affect child outcomes? What impact do frequent changes of family structure have on child outcomes? What are the mechanisms that link family structure and family change to child outcomes? How much of the impact is attributable to income changes consequent on parental separation? How much is attributable to the absence of a parent figure? How much is attributable to poorer mental health of lone parents following a parental separation? How much is attributable to the conflict between parents which often accompanies a parental separation? And how much of the association between family change and child outcomes is due to non-causal mechanisms, such as selection effects? The paper will sketch out answers to these questions, as far as these can be determined from the published results of research