THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH

The effect of family structure on youth adjustment has received increasing attention as historical trends in single parenting, divorce, remarriage, and cohabitation with partners and extended family members have produced a diverse constellation of structures. African American youth are less likely...

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Main Author: Mays, Sally
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/2371
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3370&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-33702017-03-17T08:26:11Z THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH Mays, Sally The effect of family structure on youth adjustment has received increasing attention as historical trends in single parenting, divorce, remarriage, and cohabitation with partners and extended family members have produced a diverse constellation of structures. African American youth are less likely than Caucasian youth to live in an “intact” family. Links between family structure and a variety of indices of youth adjustment have been established, although a relatively understudied outcome is that of substance initiation, despite its association with dependence and other negative sequelae. The dynamic effect of transitions has additionally been less studied than the static effect of structure. Differences in family structure and transitions may influence outcomes via parental socialization (monitoring and attachment) as well as strain (residential mobility and changes in income). These mechanisms may operate differently for Caucasian and African American youth, and may partially explain differences in adjustment. Relations between youth adjustment and transitions may be reciprocal in nature, a less often studied premise. This project made use of a nationally representative sample of more than 2,000 adolescents aged 12 to 13 in 1997 assessed across 3 waves. Regression analyses were employed to examine the associations among family structure and transitions, parenting, income, residential mobility, and substance initiation over time. This study found that living in non- two-parent family structures was consistently associated with higher concurrent levels of substance initiation, lower parental monitoring and relationship quality, lower income, and higher residential mobility. The effects of transitions on substance initiation and parenting were less robust than hypothesized, but reinforced the notion that consistently living outside a two-parent family, or consistently living in a single-parent family, is negatively associated with parenting, income, and residential stability over time. Evidence for mediated effects via changes in parenting, residential mobility, and income were significant but small in magnitude, and varied by race, such that they were significant for Caucasian but not African American youth . Partial evidence for reciprocal causality was found. Alcohol initiation at the first wave predicted separations, but marijuana initiation did not. These findings have important implications for parents, clinicians, and policy makers. 2011-04-29T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/2371 http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3370&context=etd © The Author Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass substance initiation family structure race differences Clinical Psychology Psychology Social and Behavioral Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic substance initiation
family structure
race differences
Clinical Psychology
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle substance initiation
family structure
race differences
Clinical Psychology
Psychology
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Mays, Sally
THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
description The effect of family structure on youth adjustment has received increasing attention as historical trends in single parenting, divorce, remarriage, and cohabitation with partners and extended family members have produced a diverse constellation of structures. African American youth are less likely than Caucasian youth to live in an “intact” family. Links between family structure and a variety of indices of youth adjustment have been established, although a relatively understudied outcome is that of substance initiation, despite its association with dependence and other negative sequelae. The dynamic effect of transitions has additionally been less studied than the static effect of structure. Differences in family structure and transitions may influence outcomes via parental socialization (monitoring and attachment) as well as strain (residential mobility and changes in income). These mechanisms may operate differently for Caucasian and African American youth, and may partially explain differences in adjustment. Relations between youth adjustment and transitions may be reciprocal in nature, a less often studied premise. This project made use of a nationally representative sample of more than 2,000 adolescents aged 12 to 13 in 1997 assessed across 3 waves. Regression analyses were employed to examine the associations among family structure and transitions, parenting, income, residential mobility, and substance initiation over time. This study found that living in non- two-parent family structures was consistently associated with higher concurrent levels of substance initiation, lower parental monitoring and relationship quality, lower income, and higher residential mobility. The effects of transitions on substance initiation and parenting were less robust than hypothesized, but reinforced the notion that consistently living outside a two-parent family, or consistently living in a single-parent family, is negatively associated with parenting, income, and residential stability over time. Evidence for mediated effects via changes in parenting, residential mobility, and income were significant but small in magnitude, and varied by race, such that they were significant for Caucasian but not African American youth . Partial evidence for reciprocal causality was found. Alcohol initiation at the first wave predicted separations, but marijuana initiation did not. These findings have important implications for parents, clinicians, and policy makers.
author Mays, Sally
author_facet Mays, Sally
author_sort Mays, Sally
title THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
title_short THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
title_full THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
title_fullStr THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
title_full_unstemmed THE INFLUENCE OF FAMILY STRUCTURE AND TRANSITIONS ON PARENTING, INCOME, RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY, AND SUBSTANCE INITIATION IN EARLY ADOLESCENCE: A COMPARISON OF CAUCASIAN AND AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH
title_sort influence of family structure and transitions on parenting, income, residential mobility, and substance initiation in early adolescence: a comparison of caucasian and african american youth
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2011
url http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/2371
http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3370&context=etd
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