Mindy E. Scott
Child Trends
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mindy E. Scott.
Journal of Family Issues | 2010
Alan Booth; Mindy E. Scott; Valarie King
This study uses data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to examine combinations of father residence and closeness, which have received minimal examination but involve significant numbers of children. The findings lead to a number of conclusions. First, adolescents who are close to their nonresident fathers report higher self-esteem, less delinquency, and fewer depressive symptoms than adolescents who live with a father with whom they are not close. Second, adolescents living with a father with whom they are not close have better grades and engage in and less substance use than those having a nonresident father who is not close. At the same time, however, not being close to a resident father is associated with lower self-esteem compared to having a nonresident father who is not close. Third, adolescents do best of all when they have close ties to resident fathers. A central conclusion of this study is that it is important to consider the quality of father—child relations among those who have a resident father when assessing the impact of nonresident fathers on their children.
Population Research and Policy Review | 2012
Jennifer Manlove; Elizabeth Wildsmith; Erum Ikramullah; Suzanne Ryan; Emily Holcombe; Mindy E. Scott; Kristen Peterson
Despite a growing interest in the family trajectories of unmarried women, there has been limited research on union transitions among cohabiting parents. Using data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth, we examined how family complexity (including relationship and fertility histories), as well as characteristics of the union and birth, were associated with transitions to marriage or to separation among 1,105 women who had a birth in a cohabiting relationship. Cohabiting parents had complex relationship and fertility histories, which were tied to union transitions. Having a previous nonmarital birth was associated with a lower relative risk of marriage and a greater risk of separation. In contrast, a prior marriage or marital birth was linked to union stability (getting married or remaining cohabiting). Characteristics of the union and birth were also important. Important racial/ethnic differences emerged in the analyses. Black parents had the most complex family histories and the lowest relative risk of transitioning to marriage. Stable cohabitations were more common among Hispanic mothers, and measures of family complexity were particularly important to their relative risk of marriage. White mothers who began cohabiting after conception were the most likely to marry, suggesting that “shot-gun cohabitations” serve as a stepping-stone to marriage.
Journal of Family Issues | 2015
Frances Goldscheider; Mindy E. Scott; Emily Lilja; Jacinta Bronte-Tinkew
Using a longitudinal sample of 4,010 mothers and fathers from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, we examine factors that predict whether children are living with both parents, only their mother, or only their father when the child is 3 years old. We considered parental characteristics and resources and couple\family-level characteristics and found that although many factors increased the odds of parents living together—including the financial resources of each parent, having a supportive relationship, and having a disability-free child—even more factors disproportionately increased the likelihood of either single fatherhood or single motherhood, including parents’ multiple-partner fertility and depression, mother’s drug use, and mother’s greater alcohol use. Our findings suggest that although most children living with a single parent live with their mothers, they are more likely to do so if their fathers exhibit problem behaviors, and more likely to live with their father if their mothers do so.
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2005
Valarie King; Mindy E. Scott
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2009
Jacinta Bronte-Tinkew; Allison Horowitz; Mindy E. Scott
Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2011
Mindy E. Scott; Elizabeth Wildsmith; Kate Welti; Suzanne Ryan; Erin Schelar; Nicole R. Steward-Streng
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2007
Mindy E. Scott; Alan Booth; Valarie King; David R. Johnson
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2010
Jacinta Bronte-Tinkew; Mindy E. Scott; Emily Lilja
Family Process | 2012
Natasha J. Cabrera; Mindy E. Scott; Jay Fagan; Nicole R. Steward-Streng; Nicole Chien
Parenting: Science and Practice | 2009
Jacinta Bronte-Tinkew; Mindy E. Scott; Allison Horowitz; Emily Lilja