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Family Structure and Change in Early Childhood and the Wellbeing of Tamariki Māori

journal contribution
posted on 2021-11-02, 22:16 authored by Tahu Kukutai, Kate PrickettKate Prickett, Polly Atatoa Carr, Arama Rata
Internationally there is growing evidence that family structure, and changes in structure, have an impact on children’s health and wellbeing and the intergenerational transmission of inequity. The effects, however, vary by socio-economic context and ethnicity. Using longitudinal data from Growing Up in New Zealand (n = 1349), we examine family structure and change for tamariki Māori during early childhood, and the potential impacts on their development and wellbeing. We find that a stable two-parent family is the primary experience for tamariki Māori, and sole parenthood is transitory. Diverse family trajectories appear to be linked to poorer cognitive and socioemotional outcomes but are not the main driver. More important are maternal factors, notably age and education, and material hardship. Importantly, higher levels of cultural connectedness among tamariki Māori, which are associated with diverse family forms, seem to promote socio-emotional development. Our study provides further incentive for policy and programmes that centre equity and support access to the determinants of health for tamariki Māori.

History

Preferred citation

Kukutai, T., Prickett, K., Atatoa Carr, P. & Rata, A. (2020). Family Structure and Change in Early Childhood and the Wellbeing of Tamariki Māori. New Zealand Population Review. https://population.org.nz/app/uploads/2021/02/NZPR-Vol-46_Kukutai_final.pdf

Journal title

New Zealand Population Review

Publication date

2020-01-01

Publisher

New Zealand Demographic Society

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

ISSN

0111-199X

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