Grania R Sheehan
Griffith University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Grania R Sheehan.
Journal of Divorce & Remarriage | 2004
Grania R Sheehan; Yvonne Darlington; Patricia Noller; Judith A. Feeney
Abstract The central aim of this paper is to explore whether parental separation and divorce influence childrens experiences of the sibling relationship. In addressing this research aim, the paper draws on the first wave data from a longitudinal study of sibling relationships and adolescent adjustment to parental divorce. Participants include the adolescent children and their parents from 137 divorcing families, and from a comparison sample of 165 intact families. Adolescents reported on the quality of their relationship with their siblings by filling in questionnaires, and by participating in a semi-structured interview. Adolescent children from separating and divorced families were significantly more likely than children from continuously married (or intact) families to have affect-intense sibling relationships-that is, relationships characterised by high levels of both hostility and warmth. Adolescents related these aspects of the sibling relationship to their experiences of the separation and divorce of their parents, particularly the degree of conflict between parents and the absence of a father in the childrens day-to-day lives. Results are discussed in terms of the role of the sibling relationship in supporting children through parental separation and divorce.
Journal of Divorce & Remarriage | 2008
Patricia Noller; Judith A. Feeney; Grania R Sheehan; Yvonne Darlington; Carla Rogers
ABSTRACT Family members in both separated or divorcing and married families completed a range of questionnaires about the conflict in 3 relationships—couple, parent–child, and sibling—across 2 phases of the study approximately 12 months apart. In addition, the adolescents completed measures of adjustment: self esteem, depression, and anxiety. Adolescents in a subset of the divorcing families were interviewed about the conflict in their families across the 2 phases (107 at Phase 1 and 35 at Phase 2). Analyses showed that conflict was higher in the separated or divorcing families across all 3 relationships, and that the highest levels of conflict occurred for the high-conflict divorcing families. Qualitative data from interviews illustrated the nature of the conflict that was occurring.
Personal Relationships | 2002
Grania R Sheehan; Patricia Noller
Australian Journal of Family Law | 2001
Bruce Smyth; Grania R Sheehan; Belinda Fehlberg
Australian Journal of Family Law | 2000
Grania R Sheehan; Bruce Smyth
Archive | 2001
Grania R Sheehan; Jody Hughes
Family matters | 2001
Bruce Smyth; Grania R Sheehan; Belinda Fehlberg
International Journal of Law, Policy and The Family | 2002
Grania R Sheehan
Archive | 2007
Grania R Sheehan; John Dewar; Rachel Carson
International Journal of Law, Policy and The Family | 2008
Grania R Sheehan; April Chrzanowski; John Dewar