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Journal of Family Issues
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0192513X07302103v1
28/9/1220    most recent
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Article

Nonresident Fathers and Children: Parents' New Unions and Frequency of Contact

Heather Juby1, Jean-Michel Billette2, Benoît Laplante2, and Céline Le Bourdais3*

1 Centre Interuniversitaire Québécois de Statistiques Sociales, Montreal, QC, Canada
2 Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, Montreal, QC, Canada
3 McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: celine.lebourdais{at}mcgill.ca.


   Abstract
Children often lose contact with their biological fathers after their parents separate and form new families. Using detailed longitudinal data on family transitions made by mothers and fathers after separation, the authors examine whether and how changes in the family trajectories of both biological parents affect frequency of contact that nonresident fathers maintain with their children. Approximately half of fathers experienced a change in contact frequency. The analysis shows that fathers’ new union formation reduces visits to nonresident children, but only when it closely follows separation, before fathers and children have established the structure of their postseparation relationship. Unlike other studies, however, the authors do not find that the birth of a child in the father’s new union significantly reduces his level of contact with nonresident children. Findings suggest that nonresident fathers reduce frequency of visits when their children acquire a stepfather.

First published on June 28, 2007, doi:10.1177/0192513X07302103

Journal of Family Issues 2007;28:1220.

A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2007


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L. Swiss and C. Le Bourdais
Father--Child Contact After Separation: The Influence of Living Arrangements
Journal of Family Issues, May 1, 2009; 30(5): 623 - 652.
[Abstract] [PDF]