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You are here: Home / MPRC People / Natasha Cabrera, Ph.D. / Natasha Cabrera Publications / Family Structure Change Among Latinos: Variation by Ecologic Risk

Natasha Cabrera, Elizabeth Karberg, and Jay Fagan (2019)

Family Structure Change Among Latinos: Variation by Ecologic Risk

Journal of Family Issues, 40(15):2123–2145.

We examined differences in family structure change in an urban sample of mothers (N = 1,314) from their child’s birth to age 5 and whether ecological risk moderated this association. We found that compared with U.S.-born Latino mothers, foreign-born Latino mothers were 62% less likely to break up and 75% less likely to repartner than remain stably resident. Across nativity status, Latina mothers with fewer children, more economic stress, less income, and less frequently reported father involvement were more likely to break up and repartner than remain stably resident. We found no moderation effects of ecological risk.

Family Science, Latino, Gender, Family, and Social Change, Migration and Immigrant Processes, Cabrera
family change, education, family stability, Latino families, depressive symptoms
First published May 29, 2019

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