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Low‐Income Mothers’ Private Safety Nets and Children’s Socioemotional Well‐Being
Authors:Rebecca M Ryan  Ariel Kalil  Lindsey Leininger
Institution:1. The University of Chicago;2. University of Wisconsin‐Madison *;3. The Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholars, University of Wisconsin, School of Medicine and Public Health, 610 North Walnut Street, 707 WARF, Madison WI, 53726‐2397 ().
Abstract:Using longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Well‐being Study (N = 1,162) and the National Evaluation of Welfare‐to‐Work Strategies (N = 1,308), we estimate associations between material and instrumental support available to low‐income mothers and young children’s socioemotional well‐being. In multivariate OLS models, we find mothers’ available support is negatively associated with children’s behavior problems and positively associated with prosocial behavior in both data sets; associations between available support and children’s internalizing and prosocial behaviors attenuate but remain robust in residualized change models. Overall, results support the hypothesis that the availability of a private safety net is positively associated with children’s socioemotional adjustment.
Keywords:early childhood  low‐income families  middle childhood  social support
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