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CANCELED: Connie Gager, Montclair State University
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Union Dissolution or Conflict?: The Interactive Effect of Parental Marital Status and Conflict on Adult Children’s Relationship Conflict
Located in
Coming Up
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CANCELLED: Cynthia Feliciano, Washington University in St. Louis
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Contextual Inequalities and Socioeconomic Outcomes among Adult Children of U.S. Immigrants
Located in
Coming Up
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Cancelled: School of Public Policy - Forum with Michael Rendall
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CISSM Global Forum - A Simulation Model of Partnership Formation and Fertility for Comparative International Research
Located in
Coming Up
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Caroline Hartnett, University of South Carolina
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Exploring the Recent Decline in U.S. Fertility Rates
Located in
Coming Up
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Challenging Stereotypes: A Counter-Narrative of the Contraceptive Experiences of Low-Income Latinas
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Purpose: Reproductive autonomy is associated with educational attainment, advanced employment, and wellbeing. While U.S. Latinas use contraception to control their own childbearing and have reported a desire to do so, they often use it inconsistently and have the lowest rates of contraceptive use of any group. Reasons previously cited for why Latinas do not use contraception compared with non-Latino white women include lack of access, lack of knowledge, language barriers, emphasis on large families, machismo, and religiosity. These reasons are often overly simplistic and can lead to widespread generalizations about Latinas. Methods: Using focus groups and semistructured interviews from November 2014 through June 2015, this study describes the family planning perspectives and experiences of 16 Latinas living in Baltimore and recruited from two federally qualified health centers. A social determinant of health framework was used to guide identification of important concepts and explain findings. Results: Results demonstrated that respondents reported contraceptive agency and claimed autonomy over their bodies; described a sense of responsibility and often expressed caution about having families too large to care for; expressed educational and career aspirations; and perceived contraception as critical for the postponement of childbearing to achieve their goals. Conclusion: The patient/provider encounter should include communication that recognizes all patient preferences and lived experiences to support vulnerable and/or marginalized Latinas in their desires to control their own childbearing and life choices.
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Retired Persons
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Ruth Zambrana, Ph.D.
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Ruth Zambrana Publications
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Change in Elderly Living Arrangements in Rural South Africa, 2000-2010
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Sangeetha Madhavan project, an R03 funded by NICHD, examines the impact of HIV on the probability that an elderly person will face a transition in living arrangements
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Research
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Selected Research
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Child care editorial draws on research by Philip Cohen
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Finds fault with 2021 Homebuilding survey by American Compass
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News
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Children’s Adjustment to Parents’ Breakup: The Mediational Effects of Parenting and Coparenting
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Although past studies have shown an association between union instability (i.e., change in family structure) and children’s aggressive behaviors, the mechanism by which this occurs is less understood. This study ( N = 3,387) examined whether father and mother involvement, coparenting support, and maternal responsiveness explained the association between union instability in early life and children’s aggressive behaviors at 9 years, and whether relationship status moderated this association. Findings reveal that only coparenting support mediated this association and only for children whose mothers divorced (not for mothers who experienced a nonmarital separation), suggesting that when a divorce occurs, the relationship between partners (coparenting) is more important than the relationship with children (parenting) for children’s social adjustment.
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MPRC People
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Natasha Cabrera, Ph.D.
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Natasha Cabrera Publications
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Children’s Schooling in Latin America and the Caribbean: The Role of Mothers, Fathers, and Others in the Household
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Laurie DeRose, University of Maryland, et al.; 2014-008
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Research
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Working Papers
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WP Documents
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Christina Cross, Harvard University
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Racialized Returns: Examining Racial Differences in the Consequences of Living in a Two-Parent Family
Located in
Coming Up