Title
Children in Fragile Families
Author(s)
Sara McLanahan Sara McLanahan (Princeton University)
Kate Jaeger Kate Jaeger (Princeton University)
Kristin Catena Kristin Catena (Princeton University)
Abstract
Families formed by unmarried parents increased dramatically in the United States during the latter half of the twentieth century. To learn more about these families, a team of researchers at Princeton and Columbia Universities designed and implemented a large, birth cohort study –The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. This chapter highlights several findings from the study. First, most unmarried parents have "high hopes" for a future together at the time of their child’s birth; but their resources are low and most relationships do not last. Second, unmarried mothers experience high levels of partnership instability and family complexity, both of which are associated with lower quality parenting and poorer child well being. Finally, welfare state, child support and criminal justice policies play a large role in the lives of fragile families.
Creation Date
2019-01
Section URL ID
Paper Number
WP19-03-FF
URL
https://fragilefamilies.princeton.edu/sites/fragilefamilies/files/wp19-03-ff.pdf
File Function
Jel
J12
Keyword(s)
unmarried parents, partnership instability,parenting, child well-being, policies
Suppress
false
Series
8