With about one half of all marriages ending in divorce today, it is safe to say that nearly everyone will be or has been affected by divorce in some way. For many, it does not mean the end to a family. Focusing on the consequences of divorce for children, The Postdivorce Family examines the stressors that divorce can create; adjustment problems among children of divorce; the issue of resilience for children; and individual differences in the psychological adjustment to divorce. The authors also examine the parents′ responsibilities after divorce, including custody issues, child support orders, and nonresidential parenting. This book concludes with a section that explores the effects of a high divorce rate in society, including how the prevalence of divorce has changed the family form and structural factors that have contributed to various social problems. With this volume, the authors hope to incite analysis and reflection of the issues surrounding divorce and their implications for public policy. This book integrates the empirical research and policy perspectives of several scholars in various disciplines including psychology, sociology, human development, law, and social work.
Inhoudsopgave
The Postdivorce Family – Ross A Thompson and Paul R Amato
An Introduction to the Issues
PART ONE: THE CONSEQUENCES OF DIVORCE FOR CHILDREN
Postdivorce Family Life for Children – Robert E Emery
An Overview of Research and Some Implications for Policy
Causes and Consequences of Divorce – Alan Booth
Reflections on Recent Research
PART TWO: PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY AFTER DIVORCE
The Custody of Children of Divorcing Families – Eleanor E Maccoby
Weighing the Alternatives
Improving the Law Relating to Postdivorce Arrangements for Children – Katharine T Bartlett
PART THREE: NONRESIDENTIAL PARENTING
Noncustodial Fathers and Their Impact on the Children of Divorce – Michael E Lamb
Compliance with Child Support Orders in Paternity and Divorce Cases – Daniel R Meyer
PART FOUR: DIVORCE AND SOCIETY
The Postdivorce Society – Paul R Amato
shaping the Family and Other Forms of Social Organization
Values, Policy and Research on Divorce – Ross A Thompson and Jennifer M Wyatt
Seeking Fairness for Children
Over de auteur
Paul Amato (Ph.D., 1983, Social Psychology, James Cook University, Australia) is the Arnold and Bette Hoffman Professor of Family Sociology and Demography at The Pennsylvania State University. His research and teaching interests include marital quality, causes and consequences of divorce, parent-child relationships over the life course, and psychological distress and well-being. He is a four-time winner of the National Council on Family Relations Reuben Hill Award for best published article, and has won many other awards and distinctions, such as the 2008 NCFR Ernest Burgess Award for outstanding scholarly and career achievement, the Distinguished Career Award from the American Sociological Association Section on Sociology of the Family, and the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts Stanley Cohen Distinguished Research Award. He conducted research in India under a Fulbright Fellowship, and is the author of 129 journal articles and book chapters on marriage and divorce and such books as Alone Together: How Marriage in America is Changing (Harvard University Press, 2007), The Postdivorce Family (SAGE 1999), and A Generation at Risk: Growing Up in an Era of Family Upheaval (Harvard University Press, 1997). In addition, he has served as Deputy Editor of the Journal of Marriage and Family and as an Editorial Board member for eight journals on sociology, family, and personal relationships.