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Social Determinants of Health

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From:
Dennis Raphael <[log in to unmask]>
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Social Determinants of Health <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 16 Mar 2006 07:17:40 -0500
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Notice no mention at all that being a single mom is not a predictor of
being poor in other nations. I guess this is structural functionalism at
its worse! This report is from a professor of sociology at York University
in Toronto.
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York study finds that poverty likely to endure among young single parents

The younger you become a single parent, the greater the likelihood that you
and your child will be at risk of poverty, a new study reveals.

York Professor Anne-Marie Ambert (right) has released a report based on
extensive research of one-parent families (OPFs) in Canada, in which she
finds that the success of OPFs is strongly related to the parent’s age.
Ambert is a professor of sociology in York's Faculty of Arts.

In 2001, more than 16 per cent of all families with dependent children (1.3
million families) were classified by Statistics Canada as OPFs, due to
marital breakdown, widowhood or non-conjugal birth. Roughly 90 per cent of
those one-parent families were headed by women, the study reveals.

"The younger that an individual becomes a parent, the more likely it is
that both parent and child will always be at risk of being – or becoming –
poor," Ambert writes. "The main reason is obvious: a young parent,
especially an adolescent, is less likely to have pursued educational goals
and is more likely to be unemployed."

Ambert’s research also concludes that such families are more likely to
endure multiple moves, multiple cohabitations and dissolutions, and a cycle
of inter-generational poverty. She notes that at the other end of the OPF
spectrum, single mothers in their 30s who planned a birth or adoption, are
at much lower risk of poverty. The combination of financial security and a
support network tend to improve the outcomes for these OPFs, so that they
are comparable to two-parent families.

Left: Ambert's study finds the younger an individual becomes a parent, the
more likely it is that both are at risk of becoming poor

Age is not the only factor to increase the risk of poverty among OPFs.
Poverty itself is the greatest cause of one-parent families, Ambert says,
and "not only do they contribute to poverty, they are, above all, issued
from poverty." More than half of single women with children come from
poverty themselves, according to the study. "Adolescents with low
educational and vocational expectations may believe that they have little
to lose with an unplanned pregnancy, and indeed may seek the fleeting
social status that comes with a new baby. However, for the child, being
born into poverty is the most detrimental factor for that child’s lifelong
outcomes. From a children’s rights perspective, the one right that children
seem to be deprived of is to be born under circumstances that will give
them equal opportunities in life. How many children would want poverty?"

Ambert argues that a cultural shift towards rights and individual
gratification has been at the expense of responsibilities. "A child is not
someone’s right, but someone’s responsibility," the report concludes. She
argues in favour of parenting courses and workshops that are mandatory for
all – and at all socioeconomic levels – starting in Grade 8, before too
many adolescents become sexually active.

She describes a paradox which she says stems from our individualistic
values and results in a clash between procreation as a right, and the
rights of those who have been created. "Very few cultural stigmas or
barriers remain against single mothers in our society today, but there is
little social support extended to the children born into OPFs," she says.
"More often than in the past, young single mothers will keep their babies
instead of placing them for adoption; many of these young women are unaware
of the difficulties they and their children may well face."

The 35-page study, One-Parent Families: Characteristics, Causes,
Consequences and Issues, was released recently as part of a series by the
Vanier Institute of the Family for its Contemporary Family Trends series.
To view the full study, visit www.vifamily.ca and click on the "What’s New"
section.

More about Anne-Marie Ambert

Ambert specializes in parent-child relationships, the social construction
of childhood and parenthood, and the effects of delinquency on parents. She
has authored several books including Families in the New Millennium (2001)
and The Web of Poverty (1998), as well as numerous articles and book
chapters on related topics. Her teaching interests include the family,
poverty, adult development, mental health, gerontology, and research
methods. Ambert is a member of the editorial board for the Journal of
Marriage and the Family.

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