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Long, Larry – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1992
Notes that U.S. children are more mobile than children in other Western countries and Japan. Explores explanations of this "excess" mobility, concluding that most likely explanation is greater family disruption and childhood poverty in U.S. Identifies average number of moves for children at successive ages and models association of selected…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Divorce, Family Life
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South, Scott J.; Crowder, Kyle D.; Trent, Katherine – Social Forces, 1998
Longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics show that parental divorce sharply increases probabilities that children will move out of their neighborhoods and will move to poorer neighborhoods. These outcomes are especially pronounced for African Americans and children whose parents were previously homeowners. Remarriage also has…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Children, Divorce, Economic Impact
Parker, Judith A. – 2003
Although a world of uncertainty and continual change is difficult to explain to children, by exploring and discussing the process of grief, parents can begin to understand the significance and necessity of the grief process and help their children to cope with difficult events. This booklet offers parents advice on how to talk with children about…
Descriptors: Bereavement, Children, Coping, Crisis Management
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Carothers, Shannon S.; Borkowski, John G.; Whitman, Thomas L. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2006
Children born to adolescent mothers have heightened vulnerability for exposure to multiple stressful life events owing to factors associated with teenaged parenthood such as poverty and low levels of maternal education. This study investigated whether early exposure to negative life events such as parental divorce, residential instability, and…
Descriptors: Early Parenthood, Mothers, Children, At Risk Persons