An analysis of the structural relationship between maternal gatekeeping, father involvement, and parenting stress

2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 59-78
Author(s):  
Yung-Eui Yoo ◽  
Sun-Hee Yang
2016 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 245-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula Fomby

Families formed through multipartner fertility, where children with a common biological mother were conceived by different biological fathers, represent a growing share of all families in the United States. Using data from four waves of the Fragile Families Child and Wellbeing Study ( N = 3,366), I find that women who have engaged in multipartner fertility are more likely to experience parenting stress and depression compared with mothers whose children share the same biological father. Mothers’ depression is explained in the short term by poor relationship quality with the father of her prior children and in the longer term by indicators of boundary ambiguity in complex families. Mothers’ parenting stress was only weakly explained by variation in perceived kin support, father involvement, or boundary ambiguity.


2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (11) ◽  
pp. 1500-1521 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy A. Barry ◽  
JuliAnna Z. Smith ◽  
Francine M. Deutsch ◽  
Maureen Perry-Jenkins

This study explored first-time fathers’ perceived child care skill over the transition to parenthood, based on face-to-face interviews of 152 working-class, dual-earner couples. Analyses examined the associations among fathers’ perceived skill and prenatal perception of skill, child care involvement, mothers’ breastfeeding, maternal gatekeeping, mothers’ work hours, fathers’ depressive symptoms, and fathers’ beliefs about responding to a crying child. Involvement was also examined as a potential mediator between some predictors and perceived skill. Findings suggest that breastfeeding and depressive symptoms were not related to involvement or perceived skill. Maternal gatekeeping was unrelated to skill yet had a negative relationship with involvement, if only at 1-month postpartum. Early father involvement mediated the relationship between perceived skill before and after the birth only for fathers who supported prompt response to a crying child. Finally, involvement at 1 year mediated the positive relationship between mothers’ work hours and perceived skill at the same age.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Knoester ◽  
Richard Petts

Objective: This study analyzed the relationship between father identity characteristics and father’s parenting stress over the first five years after a birth. Background: Previous work has considered how father identities shape father involvement, but has not focused on parenting stress. Understanding parenting stress is important as it is linked to fathers’ and children’s well-being. Method: We analyzed Fragile Families (FFCW) data (N = 2,547), using OLS and fixed-effects analyses. The FFCW follows the families of a cohort of new children who were born in large urban areas of the U.S., in the late 1990s.Results: OLS results indicated that positive attitudes about fatherhood, wanting to provide direct care, and having higher levels of support from the birth mother predicted lower levels of father’s parenting stress one year after a birth; father engagement, changes in birth mother’s support, and inconsistent financial support were also significantly associated with parenting stress. Fixed effects results indicated that changes in father engagement were negatively associated with changes in father’s parenting stress over years 1-5; changes in father’s inconsistent financial support were positively associated with parenting stress. Finally, we found evidence that father identity characteristics moderate predictors of parenting stress. Conclusion: Father identities seem to play an important role in shaping fathering experiences and father’s parenting stress. Implications: Fathers should be encouraged and supported in developing more salient father identities and fathering commitments by significant others, family practitioners, and public policies.


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