"Like My Grandparent, But Not": A Qualitative Investigation of Skip-Generation Stepgrandchild-Stepgrandparent Relationships

Families have become increasingly diverse and complex, which has made defining family membership more ambiguous. Issues surrounding family identity, belonging, and shared kinship are relevant in many types of complex families, but they are critically important for stepfamilies. In this study the aut...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of marriage and family 2016-06, Vol.78 (3), p.634-643
Hauptverfasser: Chapman, Ashton, Coleman, Marilyn, Ganong, Lawrence
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container_title Journal of marriage and family
container_volume 78
creator Chapman, Ashton
Coleman, Marilyn
Ganong, Lawrence
description Families have become increasingly diverse and complex, which has made defining family membership more ambiguous. Issues surrounding family identity, belonging, and shared kinship are relevant in many types of complex families, but they are critically important for stepfamilies. In this study the authors examined stepgrandchild–stepgrandparent relationships; specifically, they explored how 27 stepgrandchildren (M age = 20.8) thought and felt about their relationships with 35 skip-generation stepgrandparents (i.e., stepgrandparents who did not help raise stepgrandchildren's parents but who have been in the lives of stepgrandchildren from birth or early childhood). Most stepgrandchild–stepgrandparent relationships (n = 24/35) were described as emotionally close and supportive. Stepgrandchildren who perceived stepgrandparents as fulfilling traditional grandparent roles and whose parents modeled and facilitated warm, close relationships with stepgrandparents were most likely to perceive these intergenerational steprelationships as important. The findings have implications for kinship identification in diverse and complex families.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jomf.12303
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source Sociological Abstracts; Access via Wiley Online Library; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects Adolescents
Aging (Individuals)
Behavior
Behavior Standards
Brief Reports
Childhood
Families & family life
family interaction
Family Relationship
Family roles
Grandchildren
Grandparents
grandparents/grandparenthood
Households
Identity
Institutionalization
intergenerational relations
Intergenerational relationships
Kinship
Late Adolescents
Parents
Parents & parenting
Researchers
Social Class
Stepfamilies
Studies
Young adults
Young Children
title "Like My Grandparent, But Not": A Qualitative Investigation of Skip-Generation Stepgrandchild-Stepgrandparent Relationships
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