Waldfogel Jane, Craigie Terry-Ann, Brooks-Gunn Jeanne
Columbia University, USA.
Future Child. 2010 Fall;20(2):87-112. doi: 10.1353/foc.2010.0002.
Jane Waldfogel, Terry-Ann Craigie, and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn review recent studies that use data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS) to examine why children who grow up in single-mother and cohabiting families fare worse than children born into married-couple households. They also present findings from their own new research. Analysts have investigated five key pathways through which family structure might influence child well-being: parental resources, parental mental health, parental relationship quality, parenting quality, and father involvement. It is also important to consider the role of the selection of different types of men and women into different family types, as well as family stability. But analysts remain uncertain how each of these elements shapes children's outcomes. In addition to providing an overview of findings from other studies using FFCWS, Waldfogel, Craigie, and Brooks-Gunn report their own estimates of the effect of a consistently defined set of family structure and stability categories on cognitive, behavioral, and health outcomes of children in the FFCWS study at age five. The authors find that the links between fragile families and child outcomes are not uniform. Family instability, for example, seems to matter more than family structure for cognitive and health outcomes, whereas growing up with a single mother (whether that family structure is stable or unstable over time) seems to matter more than instability for behavior problems. Overall, their results are consistent with other research findings that children raised by stable single or cohabiting parents are at less risk than those raised by unstable single or cohabiting parents. The authors conclude by pointing to three types of policy reforms that could improve outcomes for children. The first is to reduce the share of children growing up in fragile families (for example, through reducing the rate of unwed births or promoting family stability among unwed parents). The second is to address the pathways that place such children at risk (for example, through boosting resources in single-parent homes or fostering father involvement in fragile families). The third is to address directly the risks these children face (for example, through high-quality early childhood education or home-visiting policies).
简·瓦尔德福格尔、特里 - 安·克雷吉和珍妮·布鲁克斯 - 冈恩回顾了近期的一些研究,这些研究利用脆弱家庭与儿童福利研究(FFCWS)的数据,来探究为何在单亲家庭和同居家庭中成长的孩子,比出生在已婚夫妇家庭中的孩子表现更差。他们还展示了自己新研究的结果。分析人士研究了家庭结构可能影响儿童福祉的五条关键途径:父母资源、父母心理健康、父母关系质量、养育质量以及父亲的参与度。考虑不同类型的男性和女性选择进入不同家庭类型的作用以及家庭稳定性也很重要。但分析人士仍不确定这些因素中的每一个是如何塑造孩子的成长结果的。除了概述使用FFCWS的其他研究结果外,瓦尔德福格尔、克雷吉和布鲁克斯 - 冈恩还报告了他们自己对一组始终如一定义的家庭结构和稳定性类别,对FFCWS研究中五岁儿童的认知、行为和健康结果影响的估计。作者发现,脆弱家庭与儿童成长结果之间的联系并不一致。例如,家庭不稳定在认知和健康结果方面似乎比家庭结构更重要,而由单身母亲抚养长大(无论这种家庭结构随时间是否稳定)在行为问题方面似乎比不稳定更重要。总体而言,他们的结果与其他研究结果一致,即由稳定的单亲或同居父母抚养的孩子,比由不稳定的单亲或同居父母抚养的孩子面临的风险更小。作者最后指出了三种可以改善儿童成长结果的政策改革类型。第一种是减少在脆弱家庭中成长的儿童比例(例如,通过降低非婚生育的比率或促进未婚父母家庭的稳定性)。第二种是解决使这些儿童面临风险的途径(例如,通过增加单亲家庭的资源或促进父亲参与脆弱家庭)。第三种是直接应对这些儿童面临的风险(例如,通过高质量的幼儿教育或家访政策)。