Keywords
American Indian, fathers, Native American, parental involvement, relationship quality
Abstract
Father involvement in families of urban American Indians has been a neglected area of research. In this study, the authors examined the associations among parental relationship quality, father involvement, and coresidence. The authors conducted a multiple group analysis through structural equation modeling comparing 107 American Indian fathers with fathers of the general population in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. Although the results were similar between groups, findings indicated two key differences for urban American Indians. First, emotional supportiveness had a stronger relationship with physically active engagement for American Indian fathers. Second, parental relationship quality had greater total standardized effects on American Indian father engagement than did coresidence. When developing culturally sensitive supports to increase American Indian father involvement, these findings imply that this will be best achieved through increasing the couple’s relationship quality.
Original Publication Citation
"Urban American Indians: Predictors of father’s active and passive engagement with their children", Social Work Research
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Padilla, Jonathan; Ward, Peter; and Limb, Gordon E., "Urban American Indians: A Comparison of Father Involvement Predictors across Race" (2013). Faculty Publications. 8826.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/8826
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2013
Publisher
Social Work Research
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Experience Design and Management
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