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Wiley InterScience

Child Development

Child Development

Volume 74 Issue 3, Pages 801 - 821

Published Online: 16 May 2003

Journal Compilation © 2010 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.



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Does Father Absence Place Daughters at Special Risk for Early Sexual Activity and Teenage Pregnancy?
Bruce J. Ellis 1 , John E. Bates 2 , Kenneth A. Dodge 3 , David M. Fergusson 4 , L. John Horwood 4 , Gregory S. Pettit 5 , and Lianne Woodward 6
  1 University of Canterbury bruce.ellis@canterbury.ac.nz,  2Indiana University,  3Duke University,  4Christchurch School of Medicine,  5Auburn University,  6University of Canterbury
Copyright 2003 by the Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.

ABSTRACT

The impact of father absence on early sexual activity and teenage pregnancy was investigated in longitudinal studies in the United States (N= 242) and New Zealand (N= 520), in which community samples of girls were followed prospectively from early in life (5 years) to approximately age 18. Greater exposure to father absence was strongly associated with elevated risk for early sexual activity and adolescent pregnancy. This elevated risk was either not explained (in the U.S. study) or only partly explained (in the New Zealand study) by familial, ecological, and personal disadvantages associated with father absence. After controlling for covariates, there was stronger and more consistent evidence of effects of father absence on early sexual activity and teenage pregnancy than on other behavioral or mental health problems or academic achievement. Effects of father absence are discussed in terms of life-course adversity, evolutionary psychology, social learning, and behavior genetic models.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/1467-8624.00569 About DOI

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