Children’s Developmental
Outcomes in Cohabiting Unions
Union Transitions and Cohabitation among
Older Adults
Creating New Spiritual Knowledge about
Marriage, Pregnancy, and the Transition to Parenthood
Generations at Risk: A Follow-up of
the Children of Serious Female Offenders
Spiritual Transformations and Desistance
From Crime
Youthful Relationships and Sexual Risk-Taking
Ohio Department of Education Grant.
Do Adjudicated Adolescent Females
Have a Healthy Transition to Adulthood?
Family Structure and Next Generation Parenting
Social Relationships,
Identity, and Teen Sexuality.
Cohabitation and Marriage in America
Brown, Susan
L. (PI). Children’s Developmental Outcomes
in Cohabiting Unions. K01 Mentored Research Scientist
Development Award, NICHD. 5 years
In this project, I use two secondary data sources (Add Health
and SPD) and qualitative data from semi-structured interviews
to extend prior research on the effects of family structure
on child development to include those living in cohabiting
families. I consider the significance of the family environment
at the person, process, and context levels for the development
of youth in cohabiting families, paying special attention
to the complications presented by poverty and minority status.
Brown, Susan L. (PI), Lee,
Gary R. Union Transitions and Cohabitation
among Older Adults . R03, NIA. 2 years.
We use data
from the 1998-2002 Health and Retirement Study to examine
cohabitation among adults older than age 51. In addition
to constructing a portrait of older cohabitors and describing
how they compare to those in other marital statuses, we
also estimate event history models predicting the formation
and dissolution of cohabiting unions in older adulthood.
DeMaris, Alfred
(Co-PI). Through a Sacred Lens: Creating New Spiritual
Knowledge about Marriage, Pregnancy, and the Transition to Parenthood. Funded
by the John Templeton Foundation 4 year.
This four-year project will collect four waves of data on approximately 160 couples
expecting their first child. The goal is to examine the impact of the couple’s
sanctification of the marriage and the pregnancy on post-partum family life via
the intervening mechanisms of family investment, spiritual emotions, and spiritual
resources.
Giordano,
Peggy C. (PI), Longmore, Monica A.,
and Manning, Wendy D. Generations at
Risk: A Follow-up of the Children of Serious Female Offenders.
William T. Grant Foundation. 4 years
The goal of this project is to systematically investigate
the parenting experiences of a sample of female and male serious
offenders who were interviewed first in adolescence (1982)
and later as young adults (1995/96) in connection with the
Longitudinal Study of Serious Female Offenders. The primary
aims of this study include determining the nature and extent
of risk to children born to individuals who, during their
adolescent years, evidenced serious, recurrent involvement
in antisocial patterns of behavior, and assessing the relative
impact of high levels of maternal and paternal deviance on
the nature and extent of child risk.
Giordano, Peggy
C. (PI), and Longmore, Monica A.
Spiritual Transformations and Desistance From Crime.
Metanexus Institute. 2 years
The goal of this project is to investigate the relationship
between spiritual transformations and desistance from criminal
activity. While focusing on spiritual transformations as an
active and dynamic process involving an agentic social actor
working to improve his/her life, the primary aim of this project
is to qualitatively enumerate the mechanisms through which
spiritual transformations provide a new sense of direction
and a plan to move away from a life of crime. The study will
focus on those spiritual and “worldly” circumstances
that tend to be associated with the most consistent patterns
of long term success, as well factors that serve to derail
individuals from a pattern of forward progress.
Giordano, Peggy
C. (PI), Longmore, Monica A., and
Manning, Wendy D. Youthful Relationships
and Sexual Risk-Taking. R01, NICHD. 5 years
The goal of this project is to investigate behaviors that
put individuals at risk for exposure to sexually transmitted
HIV. The primary aim of this project is two-fold: first, to
identify the features of relationships that may influence
variations in management of sexual risk deriving from the
partner’s experiences and behaviors and one’s
own involvement in risky sexual behavior. Second, to examine
distinct individual trajectories of involvement in high-risk
sexual behaviors. Findings from this project will lead to
potential areas of social malleability in relationship choices
and behaviors that can be incorporated into the design of
more effective HIV prevention/intervention efforts.
Goza, Franklinand Dr. Eric
Jones, School of Intervention Services, received
one grant from the Ohio 7 months.
Department of Education f to study entry-year mentoring in Ohio ’s public
schools. Goza and Jones received a second grant from the Ohio Department of Education
to evaluate the Ohio Comprehensive School Reform Initiative.
Lanctôt,
Nadine (PI) and Cernkovich, Stephen A (Co-PI). Do
Adjudicated Adolescent Females Have a Healthy Transition
to Adulthood? An American and Canadian Longitudinal Study. Canadian
Institutes of Health Research. One year.
The aim of this project is to examine a variety of behavioral, social, personal
and interpersonal factors as they relate to the transition of adjudicated adolescent
female delinquents to adulthood. Three specific objectives structure this
research: (1) Identification of the nature and extent of the difficulties faced
by adjudicated females in their transition to adulthood; (2) Identification of
the mechanisms underlying the persistence of these difficulties, as well as those
that lead to desistance from problem behaviors; and (3) Attention to the renewal
and amelioration of programs intended to rehabilitate adolescent females in the
juvenile justice system, especially those that seek to prepare them for the impending
transition to adulthood. Analysis will be conducted using both American
and Canadian samples that initially interviewed adjudicated female delinquents
during their adolescence, and subsequently tracked and collected data from these
respondents as they exited adolescence and entered young adulthood.
Lin, I-Fen (PI).
Family Structure and Next Generation Parenting. R03,
NICHD. 2 years
The project aims to examine whether growing up in a single-parent
family has long-term consequences for the succeeding generations.
Previous studies have shown that children who grow up with
one biological parent receive less encouragement, supervision,
and control than children who grow up with two biological
parents. Some researchers argue that children model their
own childrearing practices on their parents’ behaviors,
while others argue that children compensate for their parents’
shortcomings by being more involved with their own children
when they become parents. Yet whether growing up in a single-parent
family undermines or supports parenting in the next generation
is a question that remains unanswered. The project uses the
1968-1997 Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) and the 1997
Child Development Supplement to identify four barriers and
buffers that may mediate the influence of growing up in a
single-parent family on offspring’s parenting behavior.
Longmore, Monica
A. (PI), Peggy C. Giordano,
and Wendy D. Manning..Social Relationships,
Identity, and Teen Sexuality.1 year.
Agency: Department of Health and Human Services, Adolescent Family Life Research
Grant. The goal of this project, building on the four-wave Toledo
Adolescents’ Relationship Study is to add a qualitative and quantitative
data collection module focusing on self-identities. Aims include describing
self-identities, reflected appraisals, and the role of heightened emotionality
in adolescents’ involvement in high risk sexual behavior.
Manning,
Wendy D. (PI), and Smock, Pamela J. (University of
Michigan). Cohabitation and Marriage in America.
R01, NICHD. 3 years.
This project focuses on the question, “What is the meaning
of cohabitation?” Three research questions explore the
meaning of cohabiting unions. These are: (1) how and why cohabiting
unions begin; (2) parenting and partner roles in cohabiting
unions; and (3) how and why cohabiting unions end. Qualitative
data collection includes in-depth interviews and focus groups.
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