Trajectories of incarcerated coparenting: Examining differences across race and ethnicity

Author:

Tadros Eman1ORCID,Durtschi Jared A.2,Mullet Natira3

Affiliation:

1. Governors State University University Park Illinois USA

2. Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USA

3. Human Development and Family Science North Dakota State University Fargo ND

Abstract

AbstractEmerging research suggests that those coparenting with an incarcerated person experience multiple challenges. Examining incarcerated coparenting among minority fathers is especially salient as their incarceration rates are substantially higher than White males. This study utilized data from the Multi‐Site Family Study on Incarceration, Parenting and Partnering Study to examine changes in coparenting relationships when the male partner was incarcerated. Theoretically guided by structural family therapy, latent growth models were used to evaluate trajectories of fathers' coparenting reliability and coparenting cohesion across 34 months. Results indicated average declines within incarcerated men's reported coparenting responsibility and coparenting cohesion with their partner. Incarcerated men with higher relationship quality at T1 was significantly associated with higher initial levels of coparenting cohesion and coparenting responsibility—but not with the trajectories of coparenting change. Incarcerated fathers identifying as Hispanic and Other declined at a significantly steeper rate in coparenting responsibility than Black and White incarcerated fathers. Clinical implications and future research directions are provided.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference59 articles.

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4. Bronson J. &Carson E. A.(2019).Prisoners in 2017. U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics.

5. Partner Incarceration and Financial Support from Kin

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