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Research Articles

Rethinking discourses of family instability

, &
Pages 172-187 | Received 12 Sep 2016, Accepted 27 Aug 2017, Published online: 18 Dec 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Recent research suggests that an increasing number of children around the world live with parents who experience serial romantic relationships. Studies of these increasingly common family transitions has focused almost exclusively on the association between “family instability” and elevated levels of stress leading to children’s poorer social, cognitive, and academic outcomes. In this article the author’s challenge the use of the term family instability that pathologizes relational family patterns that have become normative. Specifically, the author’s review evidence from studies of families in transition to discern (1) children’s individual coping strategies used to deal with their parents’ serial monogamy, (2) external protective processes that improve children’s experiences of these transitions (children’s resilience), and (3) whether family transitions confer possible advantages to children’s psychosocial development. Three case examples are used to challenge the validity of labeling family transitions as “family instability.” Evidence suggests that there is a need to distinguish aspects of family transitions that cause stress and instability from normative—and potentially beneficial—changes that occur when a child experiences different adult caregivers over time. This shift in discourse may help to advance an applied research agenda that has pertinence to the resilience of modern families.

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