2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1741-3729.2012.00718.x
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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Divorced Mothers' Experiences With Coparenting

Abstract: This study produces a grounded theory of how 20 predominantly White, well‐educated women experienced sharing physical custody of their children with their former partners after divorce or separation. Three patterns of coparenting were identified in the data: continuously contentious, always amicable, and bad to better. Five negative factors and three positive factors that influenced mothers' coparenting relationships were identified. The type of relationship women had with their ex‐partners was related to how … Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(70 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…For these mothers, postseparation dynamics were characterized by higher levels of hostility and intrusion (i.e., harassment, fear, and threat). The control context present during marriage appeared to persist after separation, which is consistent with other studies (Markham & Coleman, 2012; Ornstein & Rickne, 2013). Not surprisingly, these mothers had less positive feelings toward their former partner as a father and placed less importance on the father-child relationship.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…For these mothers, postseparation dynamics were characterized by higher levels of hostility and intrusion (i.e., harassment, fear, and threat). The control context present during marriage appeared to persist after separation, which is consistent with other studies (Markham & Coleman, 2012; Ornstein & Rickne, 2013). Not surprisingly, these mothers had less positive feelings toward their former partner as a father and placed less importance on the father-child relationship.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Conversely, boundary ambiguity, or the inability to redefine family boundaries in a way that removes the former partner from a spousal role, has been linked to poor quality coparenting (Madden-Derdich, Leonard, & Christopher, 1999). Indeed, coparenting relationships suffer when divorced parents do not separate their personal relationship issues from coparenting ones (Markham & Coleman, 2012). …”
Section: Coparenting Quality After Separationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Mothers with SCV reported postseparation dynamics (e.g., anger) that were more similar to mothers with NV than CCV. For CCV, hostility at separation was highest and control dynamics persisted after separation in the form of harassment and fear, consistent with other qualitative (Hardesty et al, 2008; Markham & Coleman, 2012) and cross-sectional quantitative studies (Myhill, 2015; Ornstein & Rickne, 2013). The findings underscore linkages between marital IPV and postseparation coparenting; however, the study was limited by the short timeframe and a global measure of coparenting quality.…”
Section: Marital Violence and Postseparation Dynamicssupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Although their sample was small and not necessarily generalizable to the New Zealand (or U.S.) population, Robertson and colleagues' study elucidates ways in which some divorced parents navigate custody arrangements outside of court. Positive shared custody arrangements are also enhanced when both parents desire the arrangement, finances are not a source of strain, the father was an involved co-parent prior to the divorce, and both parents are able to be flexible in their schedules (Jamison et al 2014;Markham and Coleman 2012).…”
Section: Research On Post-dissolution Contact and Custody Arrangementmentioning
confidence: 97%