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Fatherhood: Research, Interventions, and Policies

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a comprehensive, powerful book combining pioneering empirical research with thoughtful consideration of the social and psychological implications of fatherhood, including the predictive power of fathers'activities on their children's adult outcomes, the correlation between fathers' income and their involvement with their nonmarital children the influence of fathers on their sons'probability of growing up to become responsible fathers the effects of divorce on father-son and father-daughter relationships interventions that help to keep divorced fathers in touch with their children
Abstract
How much power does a father have to influence his children's development? A lively and often heated public debate on the role and value of the father in a family has been underway in the United States for the past decade. Nevertheless, we are far from understanding the complex ways in which fathers make contributions to their families and children. Fatherhood: Research, Interventions, and Policies addresses the central questions of the role of fathers: Ž What is the impact of father involvement on child outcomes? Ž What factors predict increased involvement of fathers?Bringing together papers presented at the Conference on Father Involvement, this volume includes contributions by leading scholars in anthropology, demography, economics, family science, psychology, and sociology. Many of the contributors also address the implications of father involvement for family policy issues, including family leave, child care, and child support. Furthermore, the discussion of fatherhood ranges well beyond the case of intact, middle-class, white families to include fathers from various ethnic groups and socioeconomic classes and of varied marital status, including fathers of nonmarital children, single-father families, and nonresident fathers. Fatherhood: Research, Interventions, and Policies addresses both practical and theoretical concerns, including:the redefinition of fatherhood changes over time in research on fatherhood the predictive power of fathers’activities on their children's adult outcomes the correlation between fathers’income and their involvement with their nonmarital children the influence of fathers on their sons’probability of growing up to become responsible fathers the effects of divorce on father-son and father-daughter relationships interventions that help to keep divorced fathers in touch with their childrenThis comprehensive, powerful book combines pioneering empirical research with thoughtful consideration of the social and psychological implications of fatherhood. It is essential reading for researchers, policymakers, psychologists, and students of family studies, human development, gender studies, social policy, sociology, and human ecology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Parenting as a "Package Deal": Relationships, Fertility, and Nonresident Father Involvement Among Unmarried Parents

TL;DR: It is found that father involvement drops sharply after relationships between unmarried parents end, and women’s transitions into new romantic partnerships and new parenting roles are associated with larger declines in involvement than fathers’ transitions.
Book

Handbook of family communication

TL;DR: Theories of family relationships and a family relationstheoretical model are discussed in this article. But the authors do not discuss the relationship between the family and the individual in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A community perspective on the role of fathers during pregnancy: a qualitative study

TL;DR: Individual, family, community, societal and policy factors play a role in barring or diminishing the involvement of fathers during pregnancy and future research and interventions should target these factors and their interaction in order to increase fathers’ involvement and thereby improve pregnancy outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

American Fatherhood Types: The Good, the Bad, and the Uninterested

TL;DR: This paper presented four contemporary types of American manhood: (a) the new, involved father, (b) the good provider, (c) the deadbeat dad, and (d) the paternity-free man.
Journal ArticleDOI

Good Fathering: Father and Son Perceptions of What It Means to Be a Good Father

TL;DR: Two exploratory studies on the nature of fatherhood and on the behavioral and psychological characteristics that define a good father are detailed and implications for future study on fatherchild relationships are discussed.
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