Implications of New Marriages and Children for Coparenting in Nonresident Father Families. 2012

Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
RAND Corporation, 1776 Main Street, P.O. Box 2138, Mailstop M5E, Santa Monica, CA, 90407-2138, (phone: 310-393-0411 x6617; fax: 310-260-8160).

Prior research has noted that although cooperative coparenting between resident and nonresident parents is beneficial to children, this form of shared parenting is relatively uncommon. Relying on nationally representative data from two waves of the National Survey of Families and Households (N = 628), we examine the importance of nonresident fathers' and resident mothers' new marriages and new children for levels of cooperative coparenting and test whether changes in coparenting are linked to changes in parents' marital or fertility statuses. Consistent with prior studies, our data suggest that cooperative coparenting does not occur in most nonresident father families. Results suggest that changes to the nonresident father's family structure are of primary importance for cooperative coparenting, but that mother's family structure is relatively unimportant.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
January 2011, Developmental psychology,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
June 2015, Journal of marriage and the family,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
March 2020, Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association (Division 43),
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
February 2012, Children and youth services review,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
February 2010, Demography,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
August 2014, Journal of marriage and the family,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
December 2018, Family process,
Juliana McGene, and Valarie King
July 2023, Family process,
Copied contents to your clipboard!