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Citation

Su, Jessica Houston; Dunifon, Rachel; & Sassler, Sharon (2015). Better for Baby? The Retreat from Mid-Pregnancy Marriage and Implications for Parenting and Child Well-Being. Demography, 52(4), 1167-1194.

Abstract

Recent decades have seen a significant decline in mid-pregnancy ("shotgun") marriage, particularly among disadvantaged groups, which has contributed to increasing nonmarital birth rates. Despite public and political concern about this shift, the implications for parenting and child well-being are not known. Drawing on a sample of U.S. black and white mothers with nonmarital conceptions from the NLSY79, our study fills this gap. Using propensity score techniques to address concerns about selection bias, we found that mid-pregnancy marriages were associated with slightly better parenting quality relative to remaining single, although effect sizes were small and limited to marriages that remained intact at the time of child assessment. Mid-pregnancy marriages were not associated with improved children's behavior or cognitive ability. These findings suggest that the retreat from mid-pregnancy marriage may contribute to increasing inequality in parenting resources for children.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13524-015-0410-5

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2015

Journal Title

Demography

Author(s)

Su, Jessica Houston
Dunifon, Rachel
Sassler, Sharon

ORCiD

Su, JH - 0000-0003-3698-7807