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The Impact of Fathers' Absence on African American Adolescents' Gender Role Development
Authors:Jelani Mandara  Carolyn B. Murray  Toya N. Joyner
Affiliation:(1) Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois;(2) University of California, Riverside, California;(3) Program in Human Development and Social Policy, Northwestern University, 2120, Campus Drive, Evanston, 60208, Illinois
Abstract:Gender role development was assessed in 52 father-absent and 54 father-present African American adolescents. Father-present boys, especially those from lower-income backgrounds, had higher perceptions of their masculinity than did father-absent boys. Lower income father-absent girls perceived themselves to be higher in masculinity than did all other girls. Consequently, father-present adolescents tended to have more traditional gender role orientations than did those in father-absent homes. It is argued that mothers' and fathers' different socializing strategies balance out in two-parent homes. However, in father-absent homes, mothers' tendency to rely on and pressure their daughters fosters relatively more masculine girls, whereas a lack of father socialization fosters less masculine boys. Implications for theory and future research are also discussed.
Keywords:gender role development  father's absence  African American adolescents
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