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Journal ArticleDOI

Father Custody and Social Development in Boys and Girls

John W. Santrock, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1979 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 4, pp 112-125
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TLDR
In this paper, the effects of father custody on children's social development were studied by comparing children whose fathers have been awarded custody, children whose mothers have been granted custody, and children from intact families.
Abstract
The effects of father custody on children's social development are being studied by comparing children whose fathers have been awarded custody, children whose mothers have been awarded custody, and children from intact families. Half of the subjects are boys, and half are girls aged 6–11 years. Families are matched on SES, family size, and sibling status. The data presented here were based primarily on videotaped observations of parent-child interaction in 60 families. The most intriguing findings to date suggest that children living with the opposite sex parent (father custody girls and mother custody boys) are less well adjusted than children living with the same sex parent. However, in both father custody and mother custody families, authoritative parenting by the custodial parent was positively linked with the child's competent social behavior. Also, in both sets of divorced families, contact with additional adult caretakers was associated with positive social behaviors shown by the child.

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The Role of the Father in Child Development

TL;DR: For a variety of sociopolitical, economic, scientific, and clinical reasons, considerable interest in the study of father-child relationships has emerged in the last decade as mentioned in this paper, and the focus has narrowed to concern about the effects of increased paternal involvement.
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Parental divorce and the well-being of children: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: This meta-analysis involved 92 studies that compared children living in divorced single-parent families with children live in continuously intact families on measures of well-being, finding some support was found for theoretical perspectives emphasizing parental absence and economic disadvantage, but the most consistent support is found for a family conflict perspective.
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Interparental conflict and the children of discord and divorce.

TL;DR: It is concluded that a relation between the two domains of marital turmoil and behavior problems in children exist and several parameters of this relation are outlined, including type of maritalmoil, form of the child's behavioral response, sex differences, age effects, parental buffering, and effects of parental psychopathology.
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Children's Adjustment to Divorce: Theories, Hypotheses, and Empirical Support.

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of cinq perspectives prenant en compte l'adaptation des enfants au divorce is presented, referenting a l'absence du parent qui n'obtient pas la garde de l'enfant, l' adaptation au parent qui obtient la gardé, le conflit entre parents, les questions economiques and le stress que genere le changement de vie.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Play and Social Interaction in Children Following Divorce

TL;DR: In this paper, a longitudinal study of the effects of divorce on play and social interaction in children was presented. But, the results of the study were limited to the first year following divorce and the effects were more intense and enduring for boys.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single-parent fatherhood: An emerging family life style.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the growing phenomenon offathers being primary parents due to widowhood, divorce, separation, or adoption, and found that changes in mortality rates, legal custody arrangements, and adoption procedures are primary factors in altering the composition of single-parent fathers in the population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role Adjustment of Single Parent Fathers With Dependent Children.

TL;DR: The role adjustment of single parent fathers with dependent children was explored in this paper, where a structured questionnaire was administered to forty fathers who were either divorced or widowed and had at least one child under eighteen years of age residing with them.