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Parental Denigration: A Form of Conflict that Typically Backfire

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posted on 2018-06-25, 00:00 authored by Jenna Rowen, Robert Emery
Parental denigration is a phenomenon characterized by disparaging comments made by one parent about the other parent in front of their children. It is an emerging area of research with implications that could either follow a parental alienation perspective or a conflict perspective. In two prior studies of 648 and 994 young adults, denigration was found to be (1) measured reliably and perhaps validly; (2) reciprocally occurring; (3) related to children feeling more distant from both parents, particularly the more frequent denigrator; and (4) associated with various measures of maladjustment. These results held in married and divorced families, for mothers and fathers, in group and individual analyses, across own and sibling reports, and across studies. In a new study, parents also showed agreement in reported denigration, with divorced (particularly litigating) parents appearing motivated to underreport their own denigration behaviors and overreport their co‐parent's denigration behaviors. Across all three studies, results consistently aligned with a conflict perspective and indicated that denigrating one's co‐parent appears to boomerang and hurt the parent's own relationship with the children rather than distance children from the co‐parent.

History

Publisher Statement

This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Rowen, J. and Emery, R. Parental Denigration: A Form of Conflict that Typically Backfires. Family Court Review. 2018. 56(2): 258-268, which has been published in final form at 10.1111/fcre.12339.

Citation

Rowen, J. and Emery, R. Parental Denigration: A Form of Conflict that Typically Backfires. Family Court Review. 2018. 56(2): 258-268

Publisher

Wiley

Language

  • en_US

issn

1531-2445

Issue date

2018-04-06

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