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Marriage and Motherhood in Low Income Communities

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Title: Marriage and Motherhood in Low Income Communities


1
Marriage and Motherhood in Low Income
Communities
  • Kathryn J. Edin
  • University of Pennsylvania

2
The Spread of Single Parenthood
  • Male Earnings
  • Female Earnings
  • Public Assistance
  • Indeed, it is only a slight exaggeration to say
    that quantitative social scientists main
    contribution to our understanding of single
    parent families has been to show that nothing
    caused them to become more common. Nevertheless,
    they did.
  • (Ellwood and Jencks, 20022)

3
The Policy Context
  • Unfulfilled mandate of welfare reform
  • Research and demonstration projects for unmarried
    low income new parents in 7 states (Building
    Strong Families)
  • GA, IN, FL, LA, MA, OK, TX
  • Research and demonstration projects for married
    low income couples (Strengthening Healthy
    Marriage)
  • State Efforts
  • TANF Reauthorization releases 100 per year for 5
    years to marriage education, 50 per year for 5
    years for fatherhood programs.

4
Promises I Can KeepEDIN/KEFALAS
  • Ethnographic observations in 8 poor neighborhoods
    over 5 years
  • Repeated, in-depth interviews with 162 single
    mothers (white, African American, Puerto Rican,
    half younger, half older)
  • gt16,000
  • Funded by W.T. Grant Scholars Award, additional
    funding from W.T. Grant Foundation.

5
Supplementary Data
  • Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Survey (20
    LARGE CITIES)
  • Qualitative Addition to Fragile Families (NYC,
    CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE)
  • What About Fathers (PHILADELPHIA, AUSTIN,
    CHARLESTON, SAN ANTONIO)
  • Qualitative interviews in 7 cities with 900 poor
    parents

6
Kensington
Pennsport
7
West Kensington
East Camden
North Camden
South Camden
8
Strawberry Mansion
North Central
East Camden
North Camden
South Camden
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Courtship
  • conception lt 1 year
  • MPF, her kids play a role in courtship process.
  • Dreams of shared children. I want to have a
    baby by you a high form of social praise.
  • Contraception initially, then stop when the
    relationship reaches another level.
  • Confidence from raising siblings and cousins.

23
The Pregnancy
  • 2/3 neither planned nor avoided
  • Moms response deal with it
  • Dads response 55 steady, 45 ambivalent
  • Just as pressure goes up, rewards go down.
  • In cases of MPF, the perceived value of his
    support may plummet.

24
The Magic Moment
  • Survey
  • 80 survive or reunite at birth, 50 cohabiting.
  • Either cohabit or break up.
  • 75 of all moms and dads rate chances of
    marriage at 50/50 or better.
  • (60 say good or almost certain).
  • Edin/Kefalas
  • See marriage as 4, 5 or more years off.
  • (Gibson-Davis, Edin, McLanahan 2005)
  • Shotgun marriage wrong, but a shared child a
    powerful reason to stay together.

25
After the Baby
  • (Fragile Families baseline results for
    romantically involved couples)
  • Dad ever incarcerated 39
  • Dad earned lt 10,000 last year 33
  • Dad isnt employed now 24
  • Mom (Dad) a high school dropout 40
  • Either has child with previous partner 61
  • BY YEAR 3, 15 had married, 50 had broken up,
    40 still together, most holding firm to marriage
    goal

26
Why So Few Marriages?
  • Childbearing and marriage are not decisions that
    go together. (Different from college-educated
    sample in NYC. Sassler and Cunningham, 2005.)
  • This doesnt indicate a disinterest in marriage,
    but the high symbolic value.
  • Relatively high economic AND relational bar for
    marriage.

27
Economic Bar
  • Marriage ought to be reserved for those who have
    made it economically and can demonstrate their
    social worth with the symbols of modest success.
  • The white picket fence dream.
  • Economic ability to set up household together is
    NOT enough (most already cohabiting).
  • Not respectable to marry without meeting bar.
    (Cant trade love or help around the house for
    money.)
  • From Gibson-Davis, Edin, McLanahan 2005 Edin and
    Kefalas, 2005, and Edin, Kefalas, and Reed 2004.

28
New Twist on the Economic Bar
  • Cant achieve this dream while relying on a man.
    Women feel it is vitally important that both they
    and their partners are economically set prior
    to marriage. There is a STRONG aversion to
    economic dependence on a man.
  • Need to make a credible threat to leave
  • Patriarchal sex role expectations.
  • Bad behaviors.
  • Insurance against breakup.

29
Relationship Bar
  • Even if white picket dream is achieved, couple
    must have also proved theyve attained relational
    maturity by withstanding hard times and the test
    of time. This takes YEARS to attain.
  • Normative demands of marriage are higher.
  • Divorce is a sacrilege.
  • Want partnership of equals/best friend.
  • From Gibson, Edin, McLanahan 2003, Edin and
    Kefalas 2005

30
FFCWB SURVEYFactors Encouraging Marriage by 1
Year After Birth(Carlson, McLanahan, England
2003, FF analysis)
  • Her education and wage rate
  • Dads employment and annual earnings
  • Quality of couple relationship (his or her
    report)
  • Pro-marriage attitudes
  • Moms general distrust of men hurts
  • His kids by another mother hurt
  • All of above are net of relationship status at
    birth (broken up, visiting, cohabiting)

31
What Accounts for Break Up?
  • Financial instability/irresponsibility (25 )
  • Criminal involvement (30 )
  • Incarceration (20 )
  • Substance abuse (35 )
  • Infidelity (40 )
  • Domestic abuse (45 )
  • TOO HIGH A BAR FOR MARRIAGE?

32
What about the Kids?
  • Women hold much higher standards for the men they
    are willing to marry than for the men they are
    willing to have children with. Though they hope
    their babys fathers will rise to the occasion
    and perhaps become the loving life partner they
    desire, theyre not counting on it.
  • What would your life be like without your
    children? Children provide them with
  • Order
  • Validation
  • Purpose
  • Companionship (relational poverty)

33
The Spread of Single Parenthood Revisited
34
A Redefinition of Marriage
  • Many of the men poor women would have been
    willing to marry in the 1950s and 1960s would not
    meet the standards they hold for marriage now,
    even if unskilled mens employment hadnt
    declined at all.

35
Large Changes in Family Values
  • Opposition to premarital sex fell from two-thirds
    to one third.
  • Opposition to cohabitation fell from two thirds
    to about 40 percent.
  • Opposition to nonmarital childbearing fell
    dramatically as well.
  • Opposition to divorce among couples with children
    who just cant get along fell from half to one in
    five.
  • Sayer, Wright and Edin, 2005.

36
Marriage No Longer a Cultural Imperative
  • As marriage lost much of its practical
    significance, the culture could afford to make
    marriage more special, more rarified, and more
    significant in its meaning.

37
How the Rich and Poor have Adapted to the New
Marriage Norms
  • Though the poor and the middle class have a
    similar standard for marriage, the poor are far
    less likely to meet it.

38
The Outcome for the Poor A Rise in Nonmarital
Childbearing
  • Though marriage standards are widely shared,
    there are large and important differences between
    the social classes, and the rise in nonmarital
    childbearing can only be understood by looking at
    both.

39
The Most Important Difference The Social Value
of Children
  • The poor ascribe an extraordinarily high social
    value to children.
  • They are more likely to think that motherhood is
    one of lifes most fulfilling roles
  • They are five times as likely to say they think
    childless people lead empty lives, net other
    differences such as race, age, parental, and
    marital status.
  • From Sayer, Wright and Edin, 2005
  • For most women living in poor inner-city
    neighborhoods, childlessness is simply
    inconceivable.
  • Miss Marias miracle

40
Opportunity Costs or Absolute Preferences?
  • Fewer forgone opportunities
  • opportunity costs nil
  • out-of-pocket costs dont vary by age.
  • Stronger absolute preferences (a greater taste)
  • Children at the center of meaning making
    activity.
  • Children can rise to the top of the list of
    potential meaning making activities from mere
    lack of competition.

41
Divergent Moral Hierarchies
  • For the poor, it is better to have children
    outside of marriage than to marry foolishly and
    risk divorce.
  • Id rather say, Yes, I had my kids out of
    wedlock than say I married this idiot. Its like
    a pride thing.
  • Im not going to make any promises I cant
    keep.
  • I dont believe in divorce. Thats why none of
    the women in my family are married.
  • For the middle class marriage still ought to come
    first (Sassler and Cunningham 2004).
  • Middle-class women who face steep opportunity
    costs decide that having a child while unmarried
    is simply too potentially costly.

42
Do the Poor have Deviant Values?
  • The poor view the middle class, who privilege
    career above children, as selfish.
  • -- Angelas new plan.
  • Few believe having a child outside of marriage is
    the right way to go about things.
  • Given their constraints, they take a wait and
    see approach.

43
Children Mean Everything
  • My son is my heart. When I have hard times
    I always tell myself I wanted him. Even if I get
    that rock on my finger, that white picket fence,
    and that deed that says the house is mine, Ill
    still have my son just in case anything goes
    sour. Ill say to my husband, You leave! This
    boy is MINE.

44
Policy Message

45
Pregnancy
  • not about contraception
  • nothing left to lose
  • quest for meaning
  • 1 for kids

46
Marriage
  • Not a values problem
  • High standards reflect reverence for marriage
    and an aversion to divorce
  • Standards reinforced by community
  • Couples do generally act on their plans and
    marry if they meet modest financial goals and
    relationships are of suitable quality. BSF does
    not address economic bar for marriage
  • -New Hope
  • Couples more likely to stay married if there
    economic stability improves. SHM does not
    address economic issues either.
  • -MFIP
  • Those that dont often have relationships that
    are of dangerously low quality, not good for kids
  • Cohabitation usually the only route to
    marriage

47
  • LIBERALS? relationship skills needed, can benefit
    a wide variety of relationships
  • CONSERVATIVES? unlikely to move marriage rates
    much via relationship skills alone. Economic
    piece essential
  • ALL? must intervene earlier

48
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