Citation
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin (2016). Do Young Mothers and Fathers Differ in the Likelihood of Returning Home?.
Journal of Marriage and Family, 78(5), 1332-1351. PMCID: PMC5072456
Abstract
Building on research examining "boomerang" adult children, I examine multigenerational living among young parents. Returning home likely differs between young mothers and fathers given variation in socioeconomic characteristics, health and risk-taking, their own children's coresidence, and union stability. Using the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (NLSY97), I find that more than 40% of young parents (N = 2,721) live with their own parents at first birth or subsequently. Mothers are generally less likely to move home than fathers but only when not controlling for child coresidence and union stability. Individuals who live with all their children are less likely to return home, and controlling for child coresidence reverses gender differences, though this association disappears in the full model. Young parents who are stably single and those who experience dissolution are highly likely to return home compared to the stably partnered, with the association significantly stronger for fathers than mothers.
URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jomf.12347Reference Type
Journal Article
Year Published
2016
Journal Title
Journal of Marriage and Family
Author(s)
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin
Article Type
Regular
PMCID
PMC5072456
Data Set/Study
National Longitudinal Studys (NLS)
Continent/Country
United States of America
State
Nonspecific
ORCiD
Guzzo - 0000-0001-9718-8465