The Effects of Divorce and Sole Custody On Children
The Effects of Divorce and Sole Custody On Children
The Effects of Divorce and Sole Custody On Children
90.2% of fathers with joint custody pay all the support due
79.1% of fathers with visitation privileges pay all the support due
44.5% of fathers with no visitation pay all the support due
37.9% of fathers are denied any visitation
66.0% of all support not paid by non-custodial fathers is due to inability to pay
Statistical Source: 1988 Census "Child Support and Alimony: 1989 Series P-60, No.
173 p. 6-7. and U.S. General Accounting Office Report" GAO/HRD-92-39FS January,
1992
50% of mothers see no value in the father's continued contact with his children.
--See "Surviving the Breakup" by Joan Berlin Kelly
40% of mothers reported that they had interfered with the father's visitation to
punish their ex-spouse.
--See "Frequency of Visitation.. .." by Stanford Braver, American Journal of
Orthopsychiatry
There are: 11,268,000 total U.S. custodial mothers and 2,907,000 total U.S.
custodial fathers
--Current Population Reports, U.S. Bureau of the Census, Series P-20, No. 458,
1991
"Fatherless children are at a dramatically greater risk of drug and alcohol abuse,
mental illness, suicide, poor educational performance, teen pregnancy, and
criminality."
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health
Statistics, Survey on Child Health, Washington , DC , 1993.
"Teenagers living in single-parent households are more likely to abuse alcohol and
at an earlier age compared to children reared in two-parent households."
Source: Terry E. Duncan, Susan C. Duncan and Hyman Hops, "The Effects of Family
Cohesiveness and Peer Encouragement on the Development of Adolescent Alcohol Use:
A Cohort-Sequential Approach to the Analysis of Longitudinal Data", Journal of
Studies on Alcohol 55 (1994).
"...the absence of the father in the home affects significantly the behavior of
adolescents and results in the greater use of alcohol and marijuana."
Source: Deane Scott Berman "Risk Factors Leading to Adolescent Substance Abuse",
Adolescence 30 (1995)
A study of 156 victims of child sexual abuse found that the majority of the
children came from disrupted or single-parent homes; only 31 percent of the
children lived with both biological parents. Although stepfamilies make up only
about 10 percent of all families, 27 percent of the abused children lived with
either a stepfather or the mother's boyfriend.
Source: Beverly Gomes-Schwartz, Jonathan Horowitz, and Albert P. Cardarelli,
"Child Sexual Abuse Victims and Their Treatment", U.S. Department of Justice,
Office of Juvenile Justce and Delinquency Prevention.
Researchers in Michigan determined that "49 percent of all child abuse cases are
committed by single mothers."
Source: Joan Ditson and Sharon Shay, "A Study of Child Abuse in Lansing , Michigan
", Child Abuse and Neglect, 8 (1984).
"A family structure index -- a composite index based on the annual rate of
children involved in divorce and the percentage of families with children present
that are female-headed -- is a strong predictor of suicide among young adult and
adolescent white males."
Source: Patricia L. McCall and Kenneth C. Land, "Trends in White Male Adolescent,
Young-Adult and Elderly Suicide: Are There Common Underlying Structural Factors?"
Social Science Research 23, 1994.
"Boys who grow up in father-absent homes are more likely that those in father-
present homes to have trouble establishing appropriate sex roles and gender
identity."
Source: P.L. Adams, J.R. Milner, and N.A. Schrepf, "Fatherless Children", New York
, Wiley Press, 1984.
"Children living with a never-married mother are more likely to have been treated
for emotional problems."
Source: L. Remez, "Children Who Don't Live with Both Parents Face Behavioral
Problems," Family Planning Perspectives (January/February 1992).
"Even controlling for variations across groups in parent education, race and other
child and family factors, 18- to 22-year-olds from disrupted families were twice
as likely to have poor relationships with their mothers and fathers, to show high
levels of emotional distress or problem behavior, [and] to have received
psychological help."
Source: Nicholas Zill, Donna Morrison, and Mary Jo Coiro, "Long Term Effects of
Parental Divorce on Parent-Child Relationships, Adjustment and Achievement in
Young Adulthood", Journal of Family Psychology 7 (1993).
"Children with fathers at home tend to do better in school, are less prone to
depression and are more successful in relationships. Children from one-parent
families achieve less and get into trouble more than children from two parent
families."
Source: One Parent Families and Their Children: The School's Most Significant
Minority, conducted by The Consortium for the Study of School Needs of Children
from One Parent Families, co sponsored by the National Association of Elementary
School Principals and the Institute for Development of Educational Activities, a
division of the Charles F. Kettering Foundation, Arlington, VA., 1980
"Children whose parents separate are significantly more likely to engage in early
sexual activity, abuse drugs, and experience conduct and mood disorders. This
effect is especially strong for children whose parents separated when they were
five years old or younger."
Source: David M. Fergusson, John Horwood and Michael T. Lynsky, "Parental
Separation, Adolescent Psychopathology, and Problem Behaviors", Journal of the
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 33 (1944)
"Compared to peers living with both biological parents, sons and daughters of
divorced or separated parents exhibited significantly more conduct problems.
Daughters of divorced or separated mothers evidenced significantly higher rates of
internalizing problems, such as anxiety or depression."
Source: Denise B. Kandel, Emily Rosenbaum and Kevin Chen, "Impact of Maternal Drug
Use and Life Experiences on Preadolescent Children Born to Teenage Mothers",
Journal of Marriage and the Family56 (1994).
"Father hunger " often afflicts boys age one and two whose fathers are suddenly
and permanently absent. Sleep disturbances, such as trouble falling asleep,
nightmares, and night terrors frequently begin within one to three months after
the father leaves home.
Source: Alfred A. Messer, "Boys Father Hunger: The Missing Father Syndrome",
Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality, January 1989.
"Children of never-married mothers are more than twice as likely to have been
treated for an emotional or behavioral problem."
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health
Statistics, National Health Interiew Survey, Hyattsille, MD, 1988
A 1988 Department of Health and Human Services study found that at every income
level except the very highest (over $50,000 a year), children living with never-
married mothers were more likely than their counterparts in two-parent families to
have been expelled or suspended from school, to display emotional problems, and to
engage in antisocial behavior.
Source: James Q. Wilson, "In Loco Parentis: Helping Children When Families Fail
Them", The Brookings Review, Fall 1993.
90.2% of fathers with joint custody pay all the support due
79.1% of fathers with visitation privileges pay all the support due
44.5% of fathers with no visitation pay all the support due
37.9% of fathers are denied any visitation
66.0% of all support not paid by non-custodial fathers is due to inability to pay
Statistical Source: 1988 Census "Child Support and Alimony: 1989 Series P-60, No.
173 p. 6-7. and U.S. General Accounting Office Report" GAO/HRD-92-39FS January,
1992
50% of mothers see no value in the father's continued contact with his children.
--See "Surviving the Breakup" by Joan Berlin Kelly
40% of mothers reported that they had interfered with the father's visitation to
punish their ex-spouse.
--See "Frequency of Visitation.. .." by Stanford Braver, American Journal of
Orthopsychiatry
There are: 11,268,000 total U.S. custodial mothers and 2,907,000 total U.S.
custodial fathers
--Current Population Reports, U.S. Bureau of the Census, Series P-20, No. 458,
1991
"Fatherless children are at a dramatically greater risk of drug and alcohol abuse,
mental illness, suicide, poor educational performance, teen pregnancy, and
criminality."
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health
Statistics, Survey on Child Health, Washington , DC , 1993.
"Teenagers living in single-parent households are more likely to abuse alcohol and
at an earlier age compared to children reared in two-parent households."
Source: Terry E. Duncan, Susan C. Duncan and Hyman Hops, "The Effects of Family
Cohesiveness and Peer Encouragement on the Development of Adolescent Alcohol Use:
A Cohort-Sequential Approach to the Analysis of Longitudinal Data", Journal of
Studies on Alcohol 55 (1994).
"...the absence of the father in the home affects significantly the behavior of
adolescents and results in the greater use of alcohol and marijuana."
Source: Deane Scott Berman "Risk Factors Leading to Adolescent Substance Abuse",
Adolescence 30 (1995)
A study of 156 victims of child sexual abuse found that the majority of the
children came from disrupted or single-parent homes; only 31 percent of the
children lived with both biological parents. Although stepfamilies make up only
about 10 percent of all families, 27 percent of the abused children lived with
either a stepfather or the mother's boyfriend.
Source: Beverly Gomes-Schwartz, Jonathan Horowitz, and Albert P. Cardarelli,
"Child Sexual Abuse Victims and Their Treatment", U.S. Department of Justice,
Office of Juvenile Justce and Delinquency Prevention.
Researchers in Michigan determined that "49 percent of all child abuse cases are
committed by single mothers."
Source: Joan Ditson and Sharon Shay, "A Study of Child Abuse in Lansing , Michigan
", Child Abuse and Neglect, 8 (1984).
"A family structure index -- a composite index based on the annual rate of
children involved in divorce and the percentage of families with children present
that are female-headed -- is a strong predictor of suicide among young adult and
adolescent white males."
Source: Patricia L. McCall and Kenneth C. Land, "Trends in White Male Adolescent,
Young-Adult and Elderly Suicide: Are There Common Underlying Structural Factors?"
Social Science Research 23, 1994.
"Boys who grow up in father-absent homes are more likely that those in father-
present homes to have trouble establishing appropriate sex roles and gender
identity."
Source: P.L. Adams, J.R. Milner, and N.A. Schrepf, "Fatherless Children", New York
, Wiley Press, 1984.
"Children living with a never-married mother are more likely to have been treated
for emotional problems."
Source: L. Remez, "Children Who Don't Live with Both Parents Face Behavioral
Problems," Family Planning Perspectives (January/February 1992).
"Even controlling for variations across groups in parent education, race and other
child and family factors, 18- to 22-year-olds from disrupted families were twice
as likely to have poor relationships with their mothers and fathers, to show high
levels of emotional distress or problem behavior, [and] to have received
psychological help."
Source: Nicholas Zill, Donna Morrison, and Mary Jo Coiro, "Long Term Effects of
Parental Divorce on Parent-Child Relationships, Adjustment and Achievement in
Young Adulthood", Journal of Family Psychology 7 (1993).
"Children with fathers at home tend to do better in school, are less prone to
depression and are more successful in relationships. Children from one-parent
families achieve less and get into trouble more than children from two parent
families."
Source: One Parent Families and Their Children: The School's Most Significant
Minority, conducted by The Consortium for the Study of School Needs of Children
from One Parent Families, co sponsored by the National Association of Elementary
School Principals and the Institute for Development of Educational Activities, a
division of the Charles F. Kettering Foundation, Arlington, VA., 1980
"Children whose parents separate are significantly more likely to engage in early
sexual activity, abuse drugs, and experience conduct and mood disorders. This
effect is especially strong for children whose parents separated when they were
five years old or younger."
Source: David M. Fergusson, John Horwood and Michael T. Lynsky, "Parental
Separation, Adolescent Psychopathology, and Problem Behaviors", Journal of the
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 33 (1944)
"Compared to peers living with both biological parents, sons and daughters of
divorced or separated parents exhibited significantly more conduct problems.
Daughters of divorced or separated mothers evidenced significantly higher rates of
internalizing problems, such as anxiety or depression."
Source: Denise B. Kandel, Emily Rosenbaum and Kevin Chen, "Impact of Maternal Drug
Use and Life Experiences on Preadolescent Children Born to Teenage Mothers",
Journal of Marriage and the Family56 (1994).
"Father hunger " often afflicts boys age one and two whose fathers are suddenly
and permanently absent. Sleep disturbances, such as trouble falling asleep,
nightmares, and night terrors frequently begin within one to three months after
the father leaves home.
Source: Alfred A. Messer, "Boys Father Hunger: The Missing Father Syndrome",
Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality, January 1989.
"Children of never-married mothers are more than twice as likely to have been
treated for an emotional or behavioral problem."
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health
Statistics, National Health Interiew Survey, Hyattsille, MD, 1988
A 1988 Department of Health and Human Services study found that at every income
level except the very highest (over $50,000 a year), children living with never-
married mothers were more likely than their counterparts in two-parent families to
have been expelled or suspended from school, to display emotional problems, and to
engage in antisocial behavior.
Source: James Q. Wilson, "In Loco Parentis: Helping Children When Families Fail
Them", The Brookings Review, Fall 1993.