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Parental Divorce and Social Support Networks in Younger and Older Adults: Extending Modes of Biographical Disruption

Aging and the Family: Understanding Changes in Structural and Relationship Dynamics

ISBN: 978-1-80071-491-5, eISBN: 978-1-80071-490-8

Publication date: 25 February 2021

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines how parental divorce impacts the social support network dynamics of adult children. Research has explored long-term consequences of divorce and the impact of biographical disruption on network dynamics. Despite the long-term impact of parental divorce on social networks, these literatures have not been integrated.

Design/methodology/approach: Using survey data from 21- to 30 and 50- to 70-year-old adults in the San Francisco Bay area through the University of California Social Networks Study, or UCNets, the author explores hypotheses related to biographical disruption and characteristics of social support networks.

Findings: The impact of parental divorce is varied. Parental divorce is unrelated to total number of network ties but is significantly related to number of confidant network ties and marginally related to practical help network ties. Parental divorce is associated with higher overlap across network dimensions, or multiplexity, but this association is stronger for younger compared to older adults.

Research limitations/implications: This study is limited to compositional network dynamics. Future research should explore the impact of parental divorce on clusters of social support and their relationship to network multiplexity in addition to constrained versus preferential multiplexity. These findings are limited to perception of social support in networks, as questions vary by recall period and behavior.

Originality/value: This chapter extends research on long-term consequences of parental divorce and extends biographical disruption models in social networks to processes in family structure, highlighting how age effects shape how parental divorce impacts support strategies, perceptions, and experience at the network level in early compared to later adulthood.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

The author would like to thank Dawn T. Robinson, the University of Georgia LaSSI-SPUGA Flash Talk Series, and the ASA Section on Aging and the Life Course roundtable attendees for helpful feedback on early drafts.

The author has no known conflict of interest to disclose.

Citation

Mattingly, K.N. (2021), "Parental Divorce and Social Support Networks in Younger and Older Adults: Extending Modes of Biographical Disruption", Claster, P.N. and Blair, S.L. (Ed.) Aging and the Family: Understanding Changes in Structural and Relationship Dynamics (Contemporary Perspectives in Family Research, Vol. 17), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 229-246. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1530-353520210000017012

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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