Does Residential Mobility Affect Child Development at Age Five? A Comparative Study of Children Born in U.S. and U.K. Cities

Residential mobility is a normal feature of family life but thought to be a source of disruption to a child's development. Mobility may have its own direct consequences or reflect families' capabilities and vulnerabilities. This article examines the association between changes of residence...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental psychology 2022-04, Vol.58 (4), p.700-713
Hauptverfasser: Gambaro, Ludovica, Buttaro, Anthony, Joshi, Heather, Lennon, Mary Clare
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container_title Developmental psychology
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creator Gambaro, Ludovica
Buttaro, Anthony
Joshi, Heather
Lennon, Mary Clare
description Residential mobility is a normal feature of family life but thought to be a source of disruption to a child's development. Mobility may have its own direct consequences or reflect families' capabilities and vulnerabilities. This article examines the association between changes of residence and verbal and behavioral scores of children aged 5, contributing to the literature in three ways. First, it compares two countries, by drawing on the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study in the United States (N = up to 1,820) and an urban subsample of the U.K. Millennium Cohort study (N = up to 7,967). Second, beside taking into account an extensive range of demographic characteristics, it applies inverse probability weights to minimize observable selection bias associated with residential mobility and further controls for a wide range of family changes that often co-occur with moves. Third, the article adds to extant research on residential mobility by incorporating the type of locality from and into which families move. Individual-level longitudinal data are linked to objective measures of neighborhood socioeconomic status to gauge the quality of moves families make. Results show that residential moves are not inevitably deleterious to children. In both countries the poorer outcomes of some moves result not from moving per se but rather from the context in which they occur.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/dev0001288
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Behavior Problems
Child
Child Behavior
Child Development
Child, Preschool
Childhood Development
Children & youth
Cities
Cohort analysis
Cohort Studies
Comparative Analysis
Comparative studies
Context Effect
Correlation
Cultural Differences
Demography
Disruption
Emotional Development
Externalizing Symptoms
Families & family life
Family
Family (Sociological Unit)
Family Environment
Female
Foreign Countries
Geographical Mobility
Human
Humans
Individual Characteristics
Individual differences
Internalizing Symptoms
Life Changes
Locality
Male
Mobility
Neighborhoods
Place of Residence
Population Dynamics
Preschool Children
Residence Characteristics
Residential mobility
Selection bias
Socioeconomic Status
United States
Urban Areas
Urban Environments
Verbal Ability
Verbal Communication
Well Being
title Does Residential Mobility Affect Child Development at Age Five? A Comparative Study of Children Born in U.S. and U.K. Cities
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