Family boundary ambiguity and the measurement of family structure: The significance of cohabitation

Citation

Brown, Susan L. & Manning, Wendy D. (2009). Family boundary ambiguity and the measurement of family structure: The significance of cohabitation. Demography. vol. 46 (1) pp. 85-101 , PMCID: PMC2831266

Abstract

We used data from the first wave of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to examine family boundary ambiguity in adolescent and mother reports of family structure and found that the greater the family complexity, the more likely adolescent and mother reports of family structure were discrepant. This boundary ambiguity in reporting was most pronounced for cohabiting stepfamilies. Among mothers who reported living with a cohabiting partner, only one-third of their teenage children also reported residing in a cohabiting stepfamily. Conversely, for those adolescents who reported their family structure as a cohabiting stepfamily, just two-thirds of their mothers agreed. Levels of agreement between adolescents and mothers about residing in a two-biological-parent family, single-mother family, or married stepfamily were considerably higher. Estimates of the distribution of adolescents across family structures vary according to whether adolescent, mother, or combined reports are used. Moreover, the relationship between family structure and family processes differed depending on whose reports of family structure were used, and boundary ambiguity was associated with several key family processes. Family boundary ambiguity presents an important measurement challenge for family scholars.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dem.0.0043

Keyword(s)

Cohabitation/Marriage

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Demography

Author(s)

Brown, Susan L.
Manning, Wendy D.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

46

Issue Number

1

Pages

85-101

DOI

10.1353/dem.0.0043

PMCID

PMC2831266

Reference ID

1091