Trends in Children’s Family Instability, 1995–2010

Authors: Susan L. Brown, J. Bart Stykes, Sam Houston, and Wendy D. Manning.

Overview

Using data from the 1995 and 2006–2010 National Survey of Family Growth, the authors study examined children’s family instability from birth to age 12, emphasizing variation by racial and ethnic group. Period and cohort estimates revealed little change in children’s experiences of family transitions during the past decade. Family instability levels were comparable for White and Hispanic children, and this pattern persisted over time. However, there was an increase in family instability among Black children, reflecting growth in the share of children born to single mothers who eventually formed partnerships. Indeed, children born to single mothers in the more recent cohort experienced more family transitions, on average, than did the earlier cohort, but family instability for children born to cohabiting mothers remained unchanged. This study elucidates the various family life course trajectories children experience, revealing how these patterns differ depending on family context at birth and by racial and ethnic group.

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