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This information is from this website: http://www.cyfc.umn.edu/Documents/G/B/GB1021.html Joint Custody Bibliography What follows are papers published on joint custody, primarily theses because thatŐs usually the best source. I have started with 1980 as a starting date arbitrarily because that limits to about 30 titles. Please note in considering research in this area that it is important to place more trust on comparative studies than descriptive studies. There are a lot of subjective conclusions made and comparison studies, i.e. comparing same-age, same-sex children from different environments is less subjective than just looking at children from one environment and trying to come to conclusions from interviews. MN Children Youth and Families consortium Electronic Clearinghouse. Permission is granted to create and distribute copies of this document for non-commercial purposes provided that the author and MN CYFCEC receive acknowledgment and this notice is included. Phone 612/626-1212. EMAIL: cyfcec@maroon.tc.umn.edu The main research papers discussing custody issues: D.A. Luepnitz. Maternal, paternal and joint custody: A study of families after divorce. Doctoral thesis 1980. State University of New York at Buffalo. UMI No. 80-27618. Luepnitz studied single parent custody and joint custody. Most single parent children were dissatisfied with the amount of visitation they had, whereas the children of joint custody arrangements seemed reasonably happy with their exposure to both their parents. The quality of the parent-child relationship was determined to be better for joint custody. (The ncp-child relationship is described as more like an aunt or uncle - child relationship.) S.A. Nunan. Joint custody versus single custody effects on child development. Doctoral thesis 1980. California School of Professional Psychology, Berkeley, UMI No. 81-10142 Nunan compared 20 joint custody children (ages 7-11) with 20 age-matched children in sole maternal custody. All families were at least two years after separation or divorce. Joint custody children were found to have higher ego strengths, superego strengths and self-esteem than the single custody children. The joint custody children were also found to be less excitable and less impatient than their sole custody counterparts. For children under four at the time of separation the differences were very small. B. Welsh-Osga. The effects of custody arrangements on children of divorce. Doctoral
thesis 1981. University of South Dakota. UMI No. 82-6914. D.B. Cowan. Mother Custody versus Joint Custody: Children`s parental Relationship and Adjustment. Doctoral Thesis 1982. University of Washington. UMI No. 82-18213. Cowan compared 20 joint custody and 20 sole (maternal) custody families. Children in joint physical custody were rated as better adjusted by their mothers compared with children of sole custody mothers. The children`s perceptions in sole custody situations correlated with the amount of time spent with their father! The more time children from sole maternal custody spent with their fathers, the more accepting BOTH parents were perceived to be, and the more well-adjusted were the children. E.G. Pojman. Emotional Adjustment of Boys in Sole and Joint Custody compared with
Adjustment of Boys in Happy and Unhappy Marriages. Doctoral thesis 1982. California
Graduate Institute. UMI No. ? E.B. Karp. Children`s adjustment in joint and single custody: An Empirical Study. Doctoral thesis 1982. California school of professional psychology, Berkeley. UMI No. 83-6977. Age range of children 5 to 12 years, studying early period of separation or divorce. Boys and girls in sole custody situation had more negative involvement with their parents than in joint custody situation. There was in increase reported in sibling rivalry reported for sole custody children when visiting their father (ncp). Girls in joint custody reported to have significantly higher self-esteem than girls in sole custody. D.A. Luepnitz. Child Custody: A Study of Families after Divorce. Lexington Books 1982. J.A. Livingston. Children after Divorce: A Psychosocial analysis of the effects of custody on self esteem. Doctoral thesis 1983. University of Vermont. UMI No. 83-26981. Comparative study of children in mother sole custody, father sole custody, joint custody with mother primary, joint custody with father primary. Children in joint custody situations were found to be better adjusted than children in sole custody situations. L.P. Noonan. Effects of long-tern conflict on personality functioning of children of
divorce. Doctoral thesis 1984. The Wright Institute Graduate School of Psychology,
Berkeley. UMI No. 84-17931. V. Shiller. Joint and Maternal Custody: The outcome for boys aged 6-11 and their
parents. Doctoral thesis 1984. University of Delaware. UMI No. 85-11219. Joint Custody and Shared Parenting. (Collection of Papers) Published by Bureau of National Affairs, Association of Family and Conciliation Courts. Ed. Jay Folberg. 1984 M.R. Patrician. The effects of legal child-custody status on persuasion strategy
choices and communication goals of fathers. Doctoral Thesis 1984. University of San
Francisco. UMI No. 85- 14995. G.M. Bredefeld. Joint Custody and Remarriage: its effects on marital adjustment and children. Doctoral Thesis. California School of Professional Psychology, Fresno. UMI No. 85-10926 Both sole and joint custody children adjusted well to the remarriage of their parent; no significant difference found between the groups. The parents of joint custody situations, however, expressed more satisfaction with their children and indicated that they appreciated the time alone with their new spouse. Sole custody children also reported seeing their father less often after remarriage of the mother; this did not happen in joint custody situations. B.H. Granite. An investigation of the relationships among selfconcept, parental behaviors, and the adjustment of children in different living arrangements following a marital separation and/or divorce. Doctoral thesis 1985. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. UMI No. 85-23424. Parents in sole custodial homes (both maternal and paternal) were perceived as using psychological pressure techniques to control children. e.g. inducing guilt. However, in joint custody homes, the perception of the children was that such techniques were seldom used. No difference in self-concept was detectable among the different homes. Children`s ages 9-12 years. 15 joint, 15 maternal sole, 15 paternal sole. S. Handley. The experience of the child in sole and joint custody. Doctoral thesis
1985. California Graduate School of Marriage and Family Therapy. S.M.H.Hanson. Healthy single parent families. Family Relations v.35, p.125-132, 1985. S. A. Wolchik, S. L. Braver and I.N. Sandler. J. of Clinical Child Psych. Vol. 14, p.5-10, 1985. Self-esteem found higher in children of joint custody. Children in joint custody report significantly more positive experiences than children of sole maternal custody. P. M. Raines. (Misplaced reference) J. Pearson and N. Thoennes. The Judges Journal, Winter, 1986. Will this Divorced Woman Receive Support? Your Custody Decision may determine the Answer. Child support compared among sole custody and joint custody. Joint custody shown to produce much better compliance in child support payments to the mother. J.S. Wallerstein and R. McKinnon. Joint Custody and the Preschool Child. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, v.4, p.169-183, 1986. This paper presents joint custody for young children in a negative light, however, it is based on descriptive research not comparative research, having no control or comparison group. E.E. Maccoby, R.H. Mnookin and C.E. Depner. Post-divorce families: Custodial
arrangements compared. American Association of Science, Philadelphia. May 1986. P. M. Raines. Joint custody and the right to travel: legal and psychological implications. J. of Family Law, v. 24, 625-656, 1986 P. Neubauer. Reciprocal effects of fathering on parent and child. Men Growing Up. (1986) J. Schaub. Joint Custody After Divorce: Views and Attitudes of Mental Health Professionals and Writers. Rutgers University, Doctoral Thesis. 1986. No. 86-14559 V. Shiller. Joint versus maternal families with latency age boys: Parent characteristics and child adjustment. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, v. 56, p. 486-9, 1986. Interviews with boys as well as with both parents. Age group 6- 11. Found boys from joint custody families better adjusted than comparison group of boys from sole maternal custody families. M.B. Isaacs, G.H. Leon and M. Kline. When is a parent out of the picture? Different
custody, different perceptions. Family Process, v.26, p.101-110, 1987. F.S. Williams. Child Custody and Parental Cooperation. American Bar Assn, Family Law,
August 1987. CRC Report: R-103A. Synopses of Sole and Joint Custody Studies. Shows that the preponderance of research supports the presumption that joint custody is in the best interests of children. 1987. A GOOD REVIEW PAPER: M. Zaslow. Sex Differences in children`s response to parental divorce. Paper 1. Research methodology and postdivorce family forms. American J. of Orthopsychiatry. v.58, 355, 1988. Paper 2. Samples, Variables, Ages and Sources. Am. J. Orthopsychiatry, v.59, p118, 1989. J.S. Wallerstein and S. Blakeslee. Second chances: Men, women and children after divorce. New York, Ticknor and Fields. 1989 M. Kline, J.M. Tschann, J.R. Johnson and J.S. Wallerstein. Children`s adjustment in joint and sole custody families. Developmental Psychology, v. 25, p. 430-435, 1989. This work finds that in non-conflicted joint and sole custody families there is little measurable difference between a childŐs behavior in sole or joint custody. (Strangely, this paper states "Some quantitative studies have found no differences in symptomatology between joint and sole custody children", citing work by Luepnitz and also Wolchik, Braver and Sandler. However, Luepnitz pointed out that joint custody children retain a more normal parent-child relationship than sole custody children, Wolchik et al found that joint custody children have significantly more positive experiences and higher self-esteem than sole custody counter-parts!) Lehrman paper L.M.C. Bisnaire, P. Firestone and D. Rynard. Factors associated with academic achievement in children following parent separation. American J. of Orthopsychiatry. v.60(1), p.67-76, 1990 Visitation found to be a most significant factor in enabling children to maintain pre-divorce academic standards. J. Pearson and N. Thoennes. Custody after divorce: Demographic and attitudinal
patterns. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, v.60(2), p. 233-249, 1990. R.A. Warshak. The Custody Revolution. 1992. D. Popenoe, Associate Dean for Social and Behavioral Sciences of Rutgers University, co-chairman of the Council on Families in America. "The Controversial Truth: Two-parent Families are Better." Published in Speak out for Children, v.8 Winter 1992-3. The Best Parent is Both Parents, D.L. Levy, Hampton Roads Publishing Co., Norfolk, Virginia. 1 (800) 677-8707. 1993. Address for obtaining theses: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||