Adolescents after Divorce

Author:   Christy M. Buchanan ,  Eleanor E. Maccoby ,  Sanford M. Dornbusch
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780674001701


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   25 April 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Adolescents after Divorce


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Author:   Christy M. Buchanan ,  Eleanor E. Maccoby ,  Sanford M. Dornbusch
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Imprint:   Harvard University Press
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 14.40cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.50cm
Weight:   0.426kg
ISBN:  

9780674001701


ISBN 10:   0674001702
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   25 April 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

The aim of this volume is to shed new light on the question why do some children 'falter after divorce and others thrive?'...The volume is based upon a carefully constructed study which was rigorously executed and analysed. The subject pool consisted of 522 young people from 365 families. The study is drawn from a larger sample of 1,500 young people who participated in the Stanford Divorce Study, drawn from two counties in Northern California. This was a non-clinical population...The authors are distinguished researchers, who, in reporting the findings, are able to draw upon wide experience when making interpretations and reaching their conclusions...A book like this generally proves to be a milestone in the literature [and] this volume is destined to be a landmark...with its careful documentation, rigorous analyses and well-qualified conclusions, and with a particular emphasis on understanding the living arrangements that best predict healthy adaptation. -- Erica Frydenberg British Journal of Educational Psychology


"[Adolescents after Divorce] offers a remarkably balanced assessment of divorce’s psychological consequences and suggests concrete ways to enhance children’s adjustment. * Lingua Franca * Adolescents after Divorce, however, offers a refreshing avenue of insight and clarity about children of divorce…The writing style of the work is excellent: it is clear, accurate, scholarly, and yet quite interesting. The authors have achieved an objective but engaging tone. The material presented in the book acknowledges the passion inherent in the subject of children and divorce, but does not allow that passion to swamp rational thinking. -- Dorinda N. Noble * Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare * The aim of this volume is to shed new light on the question why do some children 'falter after divorce and others thrive?'...The volume is based upon a carefully constructed study which was rigorously executed and analysed. The subject pool consisted of 522 young people from 365 families. The study is drawn from a larger sample of 1,500 young people who participated in the Stanford Divorce Study, drawn from two counties in Northern California. This was a non-clinical population...The authors are distinguished researchers, who, in reporting the findings, are able to draw upon wide experience when making interpretations and reaching their conclusions...A book like this generally proves to be a milestone in the literature [and] this volume is destined to be a landmark...with its careful documentation, rigorous analyses and well-qualified conclusions, and with a particular emphasis on understanding the living arrangements that best predict healthy adaptation. -- Erica Frydenberg * British Journal of Educational Psychology * There has been too little systematic empirical research on the developmental pathways of individuals as they chart their way through the course of family transitions. This book goes a long way in remedying this situation by addressing several critically important questions about divorce and family functioning. In many ways, it provides a model for future research of this kind. The book describes an ambitious longitudinal study of the social and emotional adjustment of 522 adolescents in 365 families in which a parental divorce had occurred four years previously...The authors are to be congratulated for their commitment to empirical rigour and for their emphasis on individual differences in adolescents' experiences, in an area of research that is too often preoccupied with group differences. A particular strength of this study is the inclusion of a broad array of social-emotional outcome measures: externalizing and internalizing behaviour problems, adjustment in school, and the availability and use of personal resources such as friendships and the peer network...This is a well-written, interesting and very useful book that answers many important questions about the impact of divorce and custody arrangements on children's development. The book is useful for social scientists and child welfare and legal professionals, and is written to inform novices and experts alike. The authors are to be commended for providing a comprehensive scientific perspective on a critically important topic. -- Kirby Deater-Deckard * British Journal of Developmental Psychology * Buchanan et al. have produced a benchmark study of the true victims of divorce: children living with its aftermath. * Choice * ""Adolescents after Divorce is the best report to date on adolescent adjustment to parental divorce when both parents remain in contact with the child. It adds valuable information to debates over what custodial arrangements are best, whether contact with the non-custodial parent matters, what happens when the parents are still in conflict, what happens when one parent is dating, has a live-in partner, or remarries. In fact, it is the first good source of information on many of these topics. -- Andrew J. Cherlin, Johns Hopkins University This is an important study, one of the best that has been conducted on this difficult topic. The wealth of data offered here will be much appreciated, particularly on matters that are the subject of much discussion but little systematic research (e.g., joint physical custody and children's adjustment; unmarried partners; being caught in the middle). The authors' tone--balanced between concern for children's distress and optimism about children's ability to cope--is notable. The data and the tone together are not only notable, they are newsworthy. -- Robert Emery, University of Virginia"


[Adolescents after Divorce] offers a remarkably balanced assessment of divorce's psychological consequences and suggests concrete ways to enhance children's adjustment. Lingua Franca Adolescents after Divorce, however, offers a refreshing avenue of insight and clarity about children of divorce...The writing style of the work is excellent: it is clear, accurate, scholarly, and yet quite interesting. The authors have achieved an objective but engaging tone. The material presented in the book acknowledges the passion inherent in the subject of children and divorce, but does not allow that passion to swamp rational thinking. -- Dorinda N. Noble Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare The aim of this volume is to shed new light on the question why do some children 'falter after divorce and others thrive?'...The volume is based upon a carefully constructed study which was rigorously executed and analysed. The subject pool consisted of 522 young people from 365 families. The study is drawn from a larger sample of 1,500 young people who participated in the Stanford Divorce Study, drawn from two counties in Northern California. This was a non-clinical population...The authors are distinguished researchers, who, in reporting the findings, are able to draw upon wide experience when making interpretations and reaching their conclusions...A book like this generally proves to be a milestone in the literature [and] this volume is destined to be a landmark...with its careful documentation, rigorous analyses and well-qualified conclusions, and with a particular emphasis on understanding the living arrangements that best predict healthy adaptation. -- Erica Frydenberg British Journal of Educational Psychology There has been too little systematic empirical research on the developmental pathways of individuals as they chart their way through the course of family transitions. This book goes a long way in remedying this situation by addressing several critically important questions about divorce and family functioning. In many ways, it provides a model for future research of this kind. The book describes an ambitious longitudinal study of the social and emotional adjustment of 522 adolescents in 365 families in which a parental divorce had occurred four years previously...The authors are to be congratulated for their commitment to empirical rigour and for their emphasis on individual differences in adolescents' experiences, in an area of research that is too often preoccupied with group differences. A particular strength of this study is the inclusion of a broad array of social-emotional outcome measures: externalizing and internalizing behaviour problems, adjustment in school, and the availability and use of personal resources such as friendships and the peer network...This is a well-written, interesting and very useful book that answers many important questions about the impact of divorce and custody arrangements on children's development. The book is useful for social scientists and child welfare and legal professionals, and is written to inform novices and experts alike. The authors are to be commended for providing a comprehensive scientific perspective on a critically important topic. -- Kirby Deater-Deckard British Journal of Developmental Psychology Buchanan et al. have produced a benchmark study of the true victims of divorce: children living with its aftermath. Choice


Author Information

Christy M. Buchanan is Professor of Psychology at Wake Forest University. Eleanor E. Maccoby is Barbara Kimball Browning Professor of Psychology, Emerita, at the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University. Sanford M. Dornbusch was Reed-Hodgson Professor in Human Biology and Professor of Sociology and Education, Emeritus, at Stanford University.

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