Note: Cross posted from [wp angelfury] Battered Mothers Rights - A Human Rights Issue.
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Filed under: Best interest of children, Best interest of the child, Child Custody, Child Custody Battle, Child Custody Issues, Child custody for fathers, Children's rights, Civil rights, Custody for dads, Divorce, Domestic Law, Family Court Reform, Family Courts, Family Rights, Grandparent's rights, Human Rights, Maternal Deprivation, Mother Child Relationship, Mother's Rights, Motherhood, Non-custodial Mothers, Noncustodial Mothers, Patriarchy, Scientific studies, Women's Rights, father custody — justice4mothers @ 10:30 am
Divorce and child custody battles are not only devastating for parents, but extended family also. Many mothers I know are not only cut off from their children, but the custodial fathers cut the children off from the mother’s family also. This new research paper, Grandmother–Grandchild Relationship Quality Predicts Psychological Adjustment Among Youth from Divorced Families, emphasizes the importance the maternal grandmother in a child of divorce’s life. It is by Craig E. Henderson (Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Tx), Bert Hayslip Jr. (University of North Texas, Denton), Leah M. Sanders (Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX), and Linda Louden (Texas Woman’s University, Denton). Here is the abstract:
This study investigates maternal grandmother–grandchild relationship quality as a predictor of psychological adjustment among youth from divorced families. Three hundred twenty-four adolescents aged between 17 and 20 report on the quality of their relationships with their maternal grandmothers and their relational competence, self-efficacy, and psychological symptoms. Structural equation modeling analyses support a model in which participants’ relationships with grandmothers predict their psychological adjustment. Family background (divorced vs. intact families) moderates the relationship between relationship quality and adjustment; youth from divorced families indicate that their relationships with their maternal grandmothers are more salient to their adjustment than do youth from intact families. These findings suggest that the bonds young people develop with their maternal grandmothers following their parents’ divorce may positively affect their psychological functioning.
To read “Grandmother–Grandchild Relationship Quality Predicts Psychological Adjustment Among Youth from Divorced Families” by Craig E. Henderson, et.al., please click here.
Claudine and Rikki, this post is for you.
and Granny (R.I.P mom)
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