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Title: Children's Long-Term Family Structure Experiences and Adolescent Outcomes
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Mitchell, Katherine Stamps
Children's Long-Term Family Structure Experiences and Adolescent Outcomes
Presented: Dallas, TX, Population Association of America Meetings, April 2010
Cohort(s): Children of the NLSY79, NLSY79 Young Adult
Publisher: Population Association of America
Keyword(s): Adolescent Behavior; Delinquency/Gang Activity; Depression (see also CESD); Divorce; Family Structure; Parent-Child Interaction; Parent-Child Relationship/Closeness; Parental Marital Status; Parents, Single; Stepfamilies; Well-Being

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

This paper documents the family living arrangements of a cohort of youth from birth through adolescence using merged mother and child data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. In the sample of 1,870 children, 187 distinct family structure trajectories were identified. Latent class analysis yielded five distinguishable trajectories of children's living arrangements over the course of childhood: continuously married biological parent families, long-term single mother families, married biological parents who break up, cohabiting biological parents who marry or break up, and a trajectory distinguished by the addition of a stepfather at some point during childhood. The trajectories characterized by parental divorce and growing up with a long-term single mother were generally associated with lower levels of well-being in adolescence. Family instability, measured by the number of family structure transitions children experienced, was also associated with higher levels of depression and delinquency in adolescence independently of family structure trajectories.
Bibliography Citation
Mitchell, Katherine Stamps. "Children's Long-Term Family Structure Experiences and Adolescent Outcomes." Presented: Dallas, TX, Population Association of America Meetings, April 2010.