Date of Completion
12-11-2015
Embargo Period
6-7-2016
Keywords
Parenting stress, low-income families, material hardship
Major Advisor
Edna Brown
Associate Advisor
Kari L. Adamsons
Associate Advisor
JoAnn L. Robinson
Field of Study
Human Development and Family Studies
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Open Access
Open Access
Abstract
Researchers have been particularly interested in how contextual and psychosocial factors increase unmarried parents’ risk for parenting stress because of its potentially harmful impact on parental and child outcomes (Belsky, 1984; Crnic & Low, 2002; Peterson, Hennon, & Knox, 2010). In particular, research has shown that economic hardship increases parents’ risk for parenting stress (Bronte-Tinkew, Horowitz, & Carrano, 2010; DeKylen, Brooks-Gunn, McLanahan, & Knab, 2006; Teitler, Reichman, & Nepomnyaschy, 2004). The goal of this study was to test a model that examined: (1) the impact of mothers’ material hardship on both mothers’ and fathers’ parenting stress in unmarried families; and (2) whether instrumental support, supportive coparenting, fathers’ residential status, and race moderated the impact of material hardship on parenting stress. This study found that mothers’ material hardship was related to mothers’ parenting stress, but not fathers’ parenting stress. Instrumental support, supportive coparenting, fathers’ residential status, and race were not significant moderators. Directions for future research are discussed.
Recommended Citation
Maharaj, Artie S., "Examining the Effect of Material Hardship on Parenting Stress in Unmarried Parents: The Moderating Roles of Instrumental Support, Supportive Coparenting, Fathers' Residential Status, and Race" (2015). Doctoral Dissertations. 984.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/dissertations/984