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  1. Offspring of divorced/separated parents are also more likely to engage in risky sexual behavior, live in poverty, and experience their own family instability. Risk typically increases by a factor between 1.5 and 2. Still, most children whose parents divorce are resilient and exhibit no obvious psychological problems.

  2. Nov 29, 2023 · Although the separate associations between parental separation and negative life events with mental health outcomes in adolescence have been well-documented, there is a lack of studies that have examined how parental separation and negative life events jointly influence adolescents’ mental health, and whether negative life events disproportionately affect children with separated parents.

  3. The fourth class of studies are two-stage least squares (or IV) models using state unilateral-divorce laws (Gruber, 2004; Johnson and Mazingo, 2000) and Canadian no-fault divorce laws (Corak, 2001) as either reduced-form exogenous determinants or as instruments to estimate the impact of parental divorce (or living, as a child, in states with laws making divorce easier) on the children’s ...

  4. Aug 4, 2022 · Divorce often brings financial strain and social difficulty. Children can believe themselves to be the cause of their parents’ divorce. Guilt and shame can make them feel worthless, anxious, and ...

    • Jenny Perkel
  5. Dec 5, 2023 · ABSTRACT. This paper examines the multifaceted e ffects of divorce on children, focusi ng on their psychological. and physiological well-being. It highlights the significant disruption divorce ...

  6. Jan 12, 2021 · January 12, 2021. Conflict between divorced or separated parents increases the risk of children developing physical and mental health problems. A new study from the Arizona State University Research and Education Advancing Children’s Health (REACH) Institute has found that children experience fear of being abandoned when their divorced or ...

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  8. For example, historical information that could both increase parents’ inclination to divorce, and possibly affect the adolescents’ GPA differently according to parental educational levels (e.g., mental health problems or levels of parental conflict) could be of importance and might explain the larger educational penalty observed in families with highly educated parents [22,65].

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