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Coparenting Negotiation During the Transition to Parenthood: A Qualitative Study of Couples’ Experiences as New Parents
34
Citations
26
References
2019
Year
Family MedicineFamily InvolvementEducationQualitative StudyFamily FormationSocial SciencesFamily SystemsGender IdentityFamily RelationshipGender StudiesFamily InteractionNew ParentsFamily RelationshipsCouples ’ ExperiencesCoparenting RelationshipSociologyGender DistinctionsFamily PsychologyJoint RolesFamily Dynamic
Coparenting – how couples relate to one another in their joint roles as parents – is predictive of a wide variety of family and child outcomes. The current study used a qualitative, phenomenological approach to understand how couples negotiate the coparenting relationship during the transition to parenthood. The principal researcher interviewed 16 men and women of eight heterosexual, dual-earning, new parent couples. Themes emerged which were both conducive to successful coparenting and inhibitive of successful coparenting. Gender distinctions emerged between men and woman in their experiences of coparenting negotiation. Clinical implications of the themes are discussed.
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