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Intergenerational Ambivalences: Grandparents Rearing Grandchildren

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Jane. 41. 18. 19. Married 7 yrs. Sara. 4 mo. 24. Tia. 22. 25. Paul. 5. Results: Captivation. Joe ... Jesse. 29. Jessica. 6. Conclusions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Intergenerational Ambivalences: Grandparents Rearing Grandchildren


1
Intergenerational Ambivalences Grandparents
Rearing Grandchildren
  • Bethany L. Letiecq, Ph.D.
  • Department of Health Human Development

Generations United 14th Annual Conference
Washington, DC July 2007
2
BACKGROUND
  • 1990-2000 Montana saw a 53 increase in
    grandparents rearing grandchildren without a
    parent present
  • 6,053 grandparents report they are responsible
    for their grandchildren living with them
  • 61 are White
  • 35 are American Indian (although make up 6 of
    MT total population)
  • 70 are under the age of 60
  • 20 live in poverty

3
BACKGROUND
  • Montana Grandparents Raising Grandchildren
    Project (MSU Extension)
  • Support groups/therapeutic support groups
  • Educational programs and training
  • Bimonthly newsletter
  • Montana resources guide
  • Conferences
  • Referrals to services
  • State-level partnership that meets once a year

4
BACKGROUND
  • 2002 GRG survey
  • Causes of grandparent caregiving in MT
  • Methamphetamine addiction, alcohol abuse, mental
    illness, incarceration (among others)
  • Most GRG households form as a result of familial
    crises
  • Race, parental stress, length of time caregiving
    ? predictors of depression

5
Purpose of Current Study
  • Family reconfiguration takes its toll on
    grandparent caregivers, adult children, and
    grandchildren
  • How do families cope and respond to familial
    changes?
  • Are grandparent caregivers ambivalent about their
    role(s)?

6
Intergenerational Ambivalence
  • Ambivalence
  • Being pulled in opposed directions
  • Psychological ambivalence
  • Sociological ambivalence
  • Intergenerational Ambivalences
  • Contradictions or dilemmas in relationships
    between parents and adult offspring (and
    grandchildren)
  • Ambivalence irreconcilable, at least temporarily
  • Neutral termnot seen as negative or pathological

7
Intergenerational Ambivalence
  • Lüscher (2002, 2004) proposed using a
    two-dimensional model
  • Personal or subjective dimension
  • Are family relationships experienced as
    converging or diverging?
  • Institution-structural dimension
  • Are members insisting on past form or structure
    (reproducing) or desiring dramatic change
    (innovating)?
  • Combining two dimensions ? yields a four-field
    scheme or model

8
(No Transcript)
9
Methods Sample Procedure
  • N26 grandparents providing primary care of their
    grandchildren
  • No biological parents living in the home
  • Average length of time 5.5 yrs (range 4 mos -
    24 yrs)
  • Family Life Histories
  • Genograms
  • 2-hour in-person interviews
  • Interviews audio-taped, transcribed for coding

10
Demographic Characteristics (N 26)
  • Caregiver age ranged from 36 to 71 yrs (M56
    yrs)
  • 10 grandfathers and 23 grandmothers interviewed
  • 69 (n18) were married remainder single,
    separated, divorced, or widowed.
  • Annual household incomes ranged from less than
    15,000 to more than 70,000.
  • Nearly 35 (n12) of the households received some
    type of government assistance (e.g., TANF,
    Medicaid, food stamps).

11
Methods Data Analysis
  • Analytic induction approach
  • Begin by examining the data in terms of
    theory-derived sensitizing concepts or applying
    an existing theoretical framework
  • Deductive process
  • Can simultaneously search for emergent patterns
  • Inductive process

12
Results Solidarity
James 54
Sue 46
John 17
Sandy 25
Andrew 8
13
Results Emancipation
Roger 67
Marcy 64
Married 37 yrs
Will 36
Kendy
Kyle 10
Kristy 9
Kelly 14
14
Results Atomization
Mike 36
Jane 41
Married 7 yrs
18
19
Tia 22
24
25
Sara 4 mo
Paul 5
15
Results Captivation
Joe 60
Betsie 56
Married 35 yrs
Jack 33
Jesse 29
Britney 8
Jessica 6
16
Conclusions
  • Intergenerational ambivalences are fluid and can
    change with time
  • Temporal dimension
  • Other types of ambivalences experienced by
    members of complex, intergenerational family
    structures???
  • How do we move beyond dyadic relationships to
    include multiple generations?
  • Measurement issues

17
Future Research Questions
  • How do intergenerational ambivalences influence
    the quality of relationships within family
    systems?
  • What factors predict familial convergence vs.
    divergence when resolving ambivalences?
    Reproduction vs. innovation?
  • How are grandchildren affected when their primary
    caregiving grandparents are ambivalent?
  • How might social services and other systems of
    care or family policies facilitate/hinder
    positive resolutions to intergenerational
    ambivalences?

18
Contact Information
  • Bethany Letiecq
  • Department of Health Human Development
  • Bozeman, MT 59717
  • 406-994-7396
  • bletiecq_at_montana.edu
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