Using the accounts of family life in young women's life stories, this qualitative study examined experiences with biological fathers for a sample of inner-city African-American teen mothers and a comparable sample of young women who were not parents. Distinguishing findings emerged about the pattern of young women's residential history with fathers, activity and interactions with fathers, and feelings about fathers. These qualitative findings were discussed in terms of their implications for services, policy, and research.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/44239/1/10560_2005_Article_BF01876206.pd
Researchers have called for qualitative investigations into African American fathers’ parenting prac...
This study focused on the difficulties and challenges experienced by sons who had absent fathers. Th...
This qualitative study was designed to explore how young self-identified women of African American a...
This exploratory study examined the experiences of young (age 18-27) African American fathers and th...
African American males are more likely to become teenage fathers than their white counterparts, and ...
There is a disproportionate number of African American fathers in the State of Tennessee that experi...
This study investigates the relationship between teen childbearing among poor black females and vari...
With a disproportionate percentage of black children growing up in fatherless homes in the U.S. and ...
In-depth interviews of African-American nonresidential fathers were used to explore their perception...
This qualitative case study described the experiences of 21 academically-successful, young adult Afr...
This qualitative study focused on how nonresident African American fathers maintain their role as fa...
This investigation builds on a longstanding interest in the patterns of family formation of young pa...
A vast number of researchers have studied the impact that African American father absence has on the...
This research explores the lives of four middle-aged Black women, between the ages of 49 years old a...
Male survivors of abuse who become fathers themselves face challenges different from female survivor...
Researchers have called for qualitative investigations into African American fathers’ parenting prac...
This study focused on the difficulties and challenges experienced by sons who had absent fathers. Th...
This qualitative study was designed to explore how young self-identified women of African American a...
This exploratory study examined the experiences of young (age 18-27) African American fathers and th...
African American males are more likely to become teenage fathers than their white counterparts, and ...
There is a disproportionate number of African American fathers in the State of Tennessee that experi...
This study investigates the relationship between teen childbearing among poor black females and vari...
With a disproportionate percentage of black children growing up in fatherless homes in the U.S. and ...
In-depth interviews of African-American nonresidential fathers were used to explore their perception...
This qualitative case study described the experiences of 21 academically-successful, young adult Afr...
This qualitative study focused on how nonresident African American fathers maintain their role as fa...
This investigation builds on a longstanding interest in the patterns of family formation of young pa...
A vast number of researchers have studied the impact that African American father absence has on the...
This research explores the lives of four middle-aged Black women, between the ages of 49 years old a...
Male survivors of abuse who become fathers themselves face challenges different from female survivor...
Researchers have called for qualitative investigations into African American fathers’ parenting prac...
This study focused on the difficulties and challenges experienced by sons who had absent fathers. Th...
This qualitative study was designed to explore how young self-identified women of African American a...