Jenjira J. Yahirun
University of Texas at Austin
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Featured researches published by Jenjira J. Yahirun.
Research on Aging | 2016
Jenjira J. Yahirun; Connor M. Sheehan; Mark D. Hayward
This article asks how adult children’s education influences older parents’ physical health in Mexico, a context where older adults often lack access to institutional resources and rely on kin, primarily children, as a main source of support. Using logistic and negative binomial regression models and data from the first wave of the Mexican Health and Aging Study (N = 9,661), we find that parents whose children all completed high school are less likely to report any functional limitations as well as fewer limitations compared to parents with no children who completed high school. This association remains significant even after accounting for parent and offspring-level characteristics, including parents’ income that accounts for children’s financial transfers to parents. Future research should aim to understand the mechanisms that explain the association between adult children’s education and changes to parents’ health over time.
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2018
Jenjira J. Yahirun; Sung S Park; Judith A. Seltzer
Objectives This study provides new information about the demography of step-grandparenthood in the United States. Specifically, we examine the prevalence of step-grandparenthood across birth cohorts and for socioeconomic and racial/ethnic groups. We also examine lifetime exposure to the step-grandparent role. Methods Using data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and the Health and Retirement Study, we use percentages to provide first estimates of step-grandparenthood and to describe demographic and socioeconomic variation in who is a step-grandparent. We use life tables to estimate the exposure to step-grandparenthood. Results The share of step-grandparents is increasing across birth cohorts. However, individuals without a college education and non-Whites are more likely to become step-grandparents. Exposure to the step-grandparent role accounts for approximately 15% of total grandparent years at age 65 for women and men. Discussion A growing body of research finds that grandparents are increasingly instrumental in the lives of younger generations. However, the majority of this work assumes that these ties are biological, with little attention paid to the role of family complexity across three generations. Understanding the demographics of step-grandparenthood sheds light on the family experiences of an overlooked, but growing segment of the older adult population in the United States.
Journal of Family Issues | 2015
Jenjira J. Yahirun; Krista M. Perreira; Andrew J. Fuligni
Over the past decade, the Hispanic population has grown in areas with little to no history of recent immigration. Prior research comparing Hispanics in new and established destinations has chiefly focused on differences in socioeconomic indicators of assimilation. Our article departs from this work by shifting the focus to sociocultural outcomes. Specifically, we use data from Los Angeles and North Carolina to examine differences in the strength of family obligation (N = 552). We find that demographic characteristics explain all of the geographic difference in family obligation between these locations. However, we also find that co-ethnic concentration is positively correlated with adolescents’ endorsement of future family support, once ethnic identity is included in the analysis.
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2013
Judith A. Seltzer; Jenjira J. Yahirun; Suzanne M. Bianchi
Archive | 2014
Judith A. Seltzer; Jenjira J. Yahirun
Advances in Life Course Research | 2011
Thomas Soehl; Jenjira J. Yahirun
International Migration | 2014
Jenjira J. Yahirun
Demographic Research | 2014
Jenjira J. Yahirun; Dana Hamplová
Demographic Research | 2016
Eliva Atieno Ambugo; Jenjira J. Yahirun
California Center for Population Research | 2009
Jenjira J. Yahirun