Cohabiting is an emerging threat to the health of children and society, two new research reports say.One thing this article doesn't mention is the threat to a child's physical safety posed by mom's cohabiting boyfriends. David Blankenhorn notes, in his book Fatherless America, that most child abuse, including sexual abuse of teenage girls, is at the hands of live-in boyfriends, and that, statistically speaking, girls are nowhere more safe than when they are with their biological father.
In the latter half of the 20th century, “divorce posed the biggest threat to marriage in the United States,” sociology professor W. Bradford Wilcox and 17 other scholars said in a report released this week by the Institute for American Values’ Center for Marriage and Families and the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia. That is no longer the case, they said.
“Today, the rise of cohabiting households with children is the largest unrecognized threat to the quality and stability of children’s family lives,” the scholars said in “Why Marriage Matters, Third Edition: Thirty Conclusions From the Social Sciences.”
Cohabiting relationships are prone to instability, with “multiple transitions” and breakups. Children are less likely to thrive in such homes and may even be exposed to abuse from unrelated persons in their homes, the report says.
“The growing instability of American family life also means that contemporary adults and children are more likely to live in what scholars call ‘complex households,’ ” it added. There is scant research on homes in which children live with half-siblings, stepsiblings, stepparents and stepchildren, “but the initial findings are not encouraging.”
Mr. Wilcox, who directs the National Marriage Project, and his colleagues cautioned that while cohabitation is associated with increased risks of psychological and social problems for children, “this does not mean that every child who is exposed to cohabitation is damaged.”
Still, the risks are real, they said: In one study of children aged 6 to 11, about 16 percent of children in cohabiting homes had “serious emotional problems.” This was true of 4 percent of children living with married biological or adoptive parents.
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Monday, September 5, 2011
Cohabitation and Child Welfare
An article in the Washington Times highlights what some researchers have been saying for a couple of decades now about the social consequences for kids living in homes where the adults are living together without benefit of marriage: