The study is an analysis of factors that contribute to kin support and family bonds among a sample of employed African Americans (N=188). The secondary analysis examined differential levels of kin support for female and male respondents, and assessed the comparative influence of other variables, including income level, education level, religious bonds, and family bonds. Findings pointed out that there was a clear contrast between genders in relation to strength of kin support. Female respondents demonstrated higher levels of support for close relatives (m=1.58, SD=.62), as well as stronger family bonds (F(4,153)=4.080, p\u3c.005, R [squared] of .096), based on frequency of contact, proximity of relatives, and so forth. Implications are ...
This project explores the relational problems experienced in African-American women reared in the sy...
Mother-child relationships are complex, diverse, and change in response to internal and external fac...
This study evaluates the impact of perceived gender and job market inequities on the financial stres...
Researchers have used three models--cultural deviance, cultural equivalence, and cultural variance--...
Data from a purposive sample of families of elementary school children in New Orleans regarding cont...
This dissertation addresses two central debates in the scholarship on Black families: the disorganiz...
This article uses qualitative and quantitative data for a recent birth cohort from the Fragile Famil...
This article addresses two central debates in the scholarship on black families: the disorganization...
Using an integrated, quantitative and qualitative, research design this study explores the type, fre...
Grandparents or other relatives are raising over 2.7 million children in the United States; and rese...
This study examined the relationship between kinship support services and placement outcomes using s...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73197/1/j.1741-3737.2001.00213.x.pd
Kinship care is a growing option for children needing out-of-home placements, but research has not k...
Previous research on grandparents as kinship care providers demonstrated that grandparents are confr...
Numerous researchers have studied the black family in American society. Unfortunately, too few have ...
This project explores the relational problems experienced in African-American women reared in the sy...
Mother-child relationships are complex, diverse, and change in response to internal and external fac...
This study evaluates the impact of perceived gender and job market inequities on the financial stres...
Researchers have used three models--cultural deviance, cultural equivalence, and cultural variance--...
Data from a purposive sample of families of elementary school children in New Orleans regarding cont...
This dissertation addresses two central debates in the scholarship on Black families: the disorganiz...
This article uses qualitative and quantitative data for a recent birth cohort from the Fragile Famil...
This article addresses two central debates in the scholarship on black families: the disorganization...
Using an integrated, quantitative and qualitative, research design this study explores the type, fre...
Grandparents or other relatives are raising over 2.7 million children in the United States; and rese...
This study examined the relationship between kinship support services and placement outcomes using s...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73197/1/j.1741-3737.2001.00213.x.pd
Kinship care is a growing option for children needing out-of-home placements, but research has not k...
Previous research on grandparents as kinship care providers demonstrated that grandparents are confr...
Numerous researchers have studied the black family in American society. Unfortunately, too few have ...
This project explores the relational problems experienced in African-American women reared in the sy...
Mother-child relationships are complex, diverse, and change in response to internal and external fac...
This study evaluates the impact of perceived gender and job market inequities on the financial stres...