Family relations, low income and child outcomes: A comparison of Canadian children in intact, step- and lone-parent families
Authors: Don Kerr and Roderic Beaujot
Overview
Abstract (English)
This paper examines conditions that are more likely to lead to positive or negative child outcomes in intact, female lone-parent and reconstituted families. Family type is found to be more important than low income in predicting a set of behavioural, emotional, and psychological difficulties. After establishing measurement equivalence across family types, multiple group analysis using structural equation modelling shows that the explanatory factors also operate differently in the various family settings. In particular, low income has a significant impact on childhood difficulties in lone-parent and stepfamilies, but not in intact families. Family functioning has less impact on children’s outcomes in stepfamilies than in intact- or lone-parent families, and larger family size predicts negative child outcomes only in non-intact families. These observations can be interpreted in terms of the impact of family type on the transfer of financial, human, and social capital to children.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Don Kerr and Roderic Beaujot |
Publication Year | 2002 |
Title | Family relations, low income and child outcomes: A comparison of Canadian children in intact, step- and lone-parent families |
Volume | 43 |
Journal Name | International Journal of Comparative Sociology |
Number | 2 |
Pages | 134-152 |
Publication Language | English |
- Don Kerr
- Don Kerr and Roderic Beaujot
- Family relations, low income and child outcomes: A comparison of Canadian children in intact, step- and lone-parent families
- International Journal of Comparative Sociology
- 43
- 2002
- 2
- 134-152