BRIEFS
Research Brief No. 14, October 2008
Exlpored in this research brief: the importance of fathers and mothers for a nationally representative sample of teenagers, specifically examining whether a father’s human capital, social capital, and role modeling may uniquely influence his adolescent’s self-identity and behavior.
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Research Brief No. 13, August 2008
In 1988, the American family appeared to be in serious trouble—at least according to the statistics. Beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the marriage rate plummeted and the divorce rate and unwed birth percentage skyrocketed.
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Research Brief No. 12, July 2008
Divorce is a powerful force in contemporary American family life. Current estimates suggest that between 43 and 50 percent of first-time marriages will end in divorce. Consequently, more than one million U.S. children experience parental divorce each year.
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Research Brief No. 11, June 2008
One of the most important consequences of the family revolution of the last half-century—a revolution marked by dramatic increases in divorce, nonmarital childbearing, and cohabitation—is that ever larger numbers of men are becoming disconnected from family life.
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Research Brief No. 10, May 2008
Currently, many policymakers and civic leaders are interested in developing strategies to improve the well-being of African American men, and to close the achievement gap between black men and other groups. This brief surveys the research on the effects of family structure on African American men and finds overwhelming evidence that getting and staying married has a significant beneficial effect on black men’s well-being.
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Research Brief No. 9, March 2008
The decline of marriage among African Americans has been one of the most dramatic social changes in recent American history. Since 1940, rates of divorce and nonmarriage have soared among Black adults, and, as a result, the percentage of Black children born to unmarried mothers has risen from 17 percent to 70 percent.
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Brief 8, February 2008
Many Americans have been questioning the importance of marriage, and the rift among scholars has allowed both progressives and traditionalists to claim that the experts are on their side. Over the past 20 years, have leading scholars reached a consensus on marriage?
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Brief 7, January 2008
This research brief explores what role fathers play in perpetrating or protecting their children from child neglect and abuse, and it explores the social, emotional, and economic factors associated with paternal abuse and neglect.
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Brief 6, Future of the Black Family Series, May 2007
This research brief lays out a positive vision and tangible steps that will help us create a new, healthy Black marriage culture in America.
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Brief 5, Future of the Black Family Series, May 2007
This brief is the first published research on the link between religiosity and relationship quality among unmarried couples in fragile families.
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Brief 4, February 2007
Research strongly supports the idea that marriage matters for women�s, men�s, and children�s mental health.
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Brief 3, Future of the Black Family Series, November 2006
Our welfare system frequently cuts benefits to low-income couples that decide to marry. Read more about the problem and a new proposal to fix it.
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Brief 2, Future of the Black Family Series, November 2006
African American boys tend to receive more support and have better outcomes–including greater self-esteem and reduced likelihood of delinquency–when they live with married parents.
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Brief 1, November 2005
Family structure–whether a child�s parents are married, divorced, single, remarried, or cohabiting–is a significant influence on children�s educational performance.
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