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Articles

Parent relationship quality and infant–mother attachment

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Pages 285-306 | Received 13 May 2008, Accepted 15 Feb 2009, Published online: 19 May 2009
 

Abstract

This project examined interrelations between father–mother conflict, father support of mother, maternal behavior, and infant–mother attachment within a sample of 79 African American families living in a highly stressed urban community. Father support of mother was not related to maternal parenting behavior or infant attachment. Conflicted mother–father relationships were associated with problematic maternal behavior, low maternal sensitivity, infant attachment insecurity, and infant attachment disorganization. The associations between parental conflict and both infant attachment disorganization and insecurity were buffered in families in which fathers co-resided with the mother. Consistent with theory and prior research, links were also observed between maternal sensitive-responsiveness and infant attachment security and between problematic maternal parenting and infant attachment disorganization. However, maternal parenting behavior did not mediate the relation between parental conflict and infant attachment. Results are discussed with respect to whether and under what circumstances child exposure to parent conflict can have a direct effect on infant–mother attachment that is not mediated through dyadic infant–mother interaction.

Acknowledgements

This paper is dedicated to Belinda Sims, PhD, National Institute on Drug Abuse, whose dissertation data formed the basis for this study (Sims, Citation1997). The research was supported by generous grants from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Mott Foundation. The writing of this paper was supported by the Irving B. Harris Infant Mental Health Training Program at the University of Chicago. The authors acknowledgment the important roles of Aisha Ray and Robert Halpern of Erikson Institute as study co-investigators. The authors thank Brenda Copley and Patricia Brady for their work in collecting the data and Lisa Fisher for her work coding videotapes. The authors thank L. Alan Sroufe and Elizabeth Carlson for their help in establishing reliability on the strange situation coding.

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