Author:
JAFFEE SARA,CASPI AVSHALOM,MOFFITT TERRIE E.,BELSKY JAY,SILVA PHIL
Abstract
This 20-year longitudinal study showed that the young adult offspring of teen mothers are at
risk for a range of adverse outcomes including early school leaving, unemployment, early
parenthood, and violent offending. We tested how much the effect of teen childbearing on
offspring outcomes could be accounted for by social selection (in which a woman's
characteristics that make her an inadequate parent also make her likely to bear children in her
teens) versus social influence (in which the consequences of becoming a teen mother also bring
harm to her children, apart from any characteristics of her own). The results provided support for
both mechanisms. Across outcomes, maternal characteristics and family circumstances together
accounted for approximately 39% of the effect of teen childbearing on offspring outcomes.
Consistent with a social-selection hypothesis, maternal characteristics accounted for
approximately 18% of the effect of teen childbearing on offspring outcomes; consistent
with a social-influence hypothesis, family circumstances accounted for 21% of the teen
childbearing effect after controlling for maternal characteristics. These results suggest that public
policy initiatives should be targeted not only at delaying childbearing in the population but at
supporting individual at-risk mothers and their children.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
243 articles.
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