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Edited by Marilyn McShane and Frank P. Williams III
   

   
Working Mothers and Juvenile Delinquency
   

Thomas Vander Ven

       
   

Vander Ven finds that by working outside the home mothers have no effect on family processes or juvenile delinquency.

"Mother-blame," blaming mothers for their children's anti-social behavior, is a common theme of social critics and policymakers. Critics charge that mothers have chosen work over parenting and that their children have suffered due to a loss of supervision and support. Their children are, therefore, more likely to commit crime. This study explores the relationship between maternal work and juvenile delinquency. The effects of maternal work are traced through a variety of delinquency pathways to delinquency. The results demonstrate that maternal work has little or no effect on family processes or on juvenile delinquency. Instead, Vander Ven suggests that variables measuring structural disadvantage are more important predictors of negative family processes and delinquent behavior in adolescents.

Table of Contents

  1. Social Change, Maternal Employment, and Child Behavior
  2. Exploring the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth
  3. Does Maternal Work Cause Delinquency?
  4. Conclusion

  5. Bibliography
    Index
       
  Thomas Vander Ven is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Ohio University. He received his Ph.D. in sociology at the University of Cincinnati in 1998.
       
    viii, 156 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-931202-72-9.
$52. Published.