Post-Separation Conflict Trajectories: A Longitudinal Study |
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Authors: | Sylvie Drapeau Marie-Hélène Gagné Marie-Christine Saint-Jacques Rachel Lépine Hans Ivers |
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Affiliation: | 1. Research Centre on Youth and Families at Risk , Université Laval , Québec City, Canada sylvie.drapeau@psy.ulaval.ca;3. Research Centre on Youth and Families at Risk , Université Laval , Québec City, Canada |
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Abstract: | Although previous studies have shown that parental separation and parental conflict contribute independently to the adaptation difficulties of young people, there is, as of yet, no precise portrait of how post-separation conflicts evolve. Indeed, some fundamental questions remain unanswered: (1) Do parents who experience few conflicts during their break-up continue to enjoy a harmonious relationship afterward? (2) When parents have a conflictual relationship in the first years after separating, do problems eventually subside? (3) Are a family's characteristics associated with the way a post-separation conflict evolves? The present, exploratory study attempts to provide some answers to these three questions. The sample was composed of 123 boys and girls from 8 to 11 years old. The children and their parents were interviewed on two separate occasions at a 1-year interval. The first interview (time 1) took place 2.5 years after the separation on average. The children were notably asked to give their perception of the parental conflict. Four post-separation conflict trajectories were brought to light. Analysis also targeted three more-specific variables that distinguished these conflict trajectories, namely family income, quality of the relationship with the mother, and the degree of agreement at the time of separation. |
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Keywords: | divorce family parental conflict preadolescents |
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