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Breaking the Adolescent Parent Cycle: Valuing Fatherhood and Motherhood PDF

533 Pages·2009·1.61 MB·English
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University Press of America®, Inc. publishing across academic disciplines since 1975 “Please listen to perhaps the only person in America who has the knowledge and the answers WESTMAN B R E A K I N G T H E . . . If everyone in government did, our prisons would be virtually empty in twenty years. And childhood would again be a time of joy instead of the nightmare it now is for too many children.” —JUDGE CHARLES D. GILL, Connecticut Superior Court “Offers the child advocate a solid foundation for doing good. It is grounded in research and theory and in profoundly ‘pro-child’ values.” A D O L E S C E N T B —JAMES GARBARINO, director, Center for the Human Rights of Children, R and professor, Loyola University Chicago E A “Seldom do we see someone analyze social problems, review the relevant research, K and offer practical solutions as compellingly . . . His insights no doubt derive from IN P A R E N T C Y C L E a unique combination of clinical, teaching, and research experience.” G —JAY BELSKY, director, Institute for the Study of Children, Families, T and Social Issues, and professor, University of London H E “A tour de force . . . the first 360-degree examination of adolescent parenting—looking at its A social, cultural, and biological roots; its consequences for not only the adolescent mother, but D also the generations on either side of her; and strategies for preventing adolescent childbearing, O as well as for creating nurturing environments for children who are born to adolescent parents.” L E —REBECCA MAYNARD, university trustee and professor of education S and social policy, University of Pennsylvania C E This book addresses the dilemma created by the discrepancy between our efforts to prevent N adolescent pregnancy and our support of adolescent parenthood, which the author argues is T VALUING FATHERHOOD America’s greatest unrecognized public health crisis. It is the most preventable cause of crime P and welfare dependency, and because we hold no expectations for parents who conceive and A R give birth to children, rates of child neglect and abuse in the United States far exceed those of E AND MOTHERHOOD other developed nations. Westman explores the circumstances and values that make mother- N hood seem to be girls’ best option and that induce males to conceive without the ability to T support their children. It proposes a feasible legal procedure as the basis for ensuring that ado- C lescents’ babies have competent parents with the resources and environments they need. Y C JACK C. WESTMAN, M.D. and M.S., is professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of L Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. He has served as editor of Child Psychiatry E and Human Development, president of the American Association of Psychiatric Services, and president of the Multidisciplinary Academy of Clinical Education. He is currently president of Wisconsin Cares, Inc. JACK C. WESTMAN For orders and information please contact the publisher UNIVERSITY PRESS OF AMERICA®, INC. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200 90000 Lanham, Maryland 20706 9 780761 845362 1-800-462-6420 (cid:129) www.univpress.com BBrreeaakkiinnggAAddPPaarreennttCCyycclleePPBBKK..iinndddd 11 55//2277//0099 55::1144::4466 PPMM Breaking the Adolescent Parent Cycle Valuing Fatherhood and Motherhood Jack C. Westman UNIVERSITY PRESS OF AMERICA,® INC. Lanham •Boulder •New York •Toronto •Plymouth, UK Copyright ©2009 by Jack C. Westman University Press of America,®Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard Suite 200 Lanham, Maryland 20706 UPAAcquisitions Department (301) 459-3366 Estover Road Plymouth PL6 7PY United Kingdom All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America British Library Cataloging in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Control Number: 2009924130 ISBN: 978-0-7618-4536-2 (paperback : alk. paper) eISBN: 978-0-7618-4537-9 Figure 10.1 is derived from a figure in the article Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Adolescent Brain in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Volume 1021: 77–85, ©2004, with the permission of Blackwell Publishing. Figure 31.1 is derived from figure 2.6 in Heckman, James J. & Krueger, Alan B., edited by Benjamin M. Friedman, introduction by Benjamin M. Friedman, Inequality in America: What Role for Human Capital Policies? ©2004 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, by permission of the MITPress. (cid:2)™ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48—1984 Dedicated to our grandchildren and to their generation: Matthew, Laura, Carly, Peter, Megan, Eric, Luke, Clay and Alexander Contents Preface vii Acknowledgments xi Introduction xiii Prolog xix PART1: THE PROBLEM 1 1 The Neglect of Children and Adolescents in the United States 3 2 Adolescent Pregnancy and Childbirth Trends 19 3 The Denigration of Parenthood 25 4 Divergent Parenthood Styles 36 5 Dysfunctional Social Policies and Services 50 PART2: THEORETICALFOUNDATION 59 6 Chaos/Complexity Theory 61 7 The Rights of Babies and Adolescents 77 8 The Rights of Parents 93 PART3: THE HUMAN DEVELOPMENTALPROCESS 103 9 Developing Human Relationships: Attachment Bonding 105 10 Adolescent Development 115 11 Emerging Adulthood 135 12 Parenthood as a Developmental Stage in Life 143 PART4: THE DYNAMICS OFADOLESCENTPARENTHOOD 149 13 Choosing to Be an Adolescent Parent 151 14 Profiles of Adolescent Parents 160 v vi Contents 15 The Impact of Parenthood on Adolescents 167 16 The Impact of Adolescent Parenthood on Children 175 PART5: FAMILIES 181 17 The Families of Adolescent Parents 183 18 The Impact of Adolescent Parenthood on Families 187 PART6: NEIGHBORHOODS AND COMMUNITIES 199 19 Social Class and Adolescent Parenthood 201 20 Peer Influences on Adolescent Parenthood 215 21 Gang Influences on Adolescent Parenthood 226 PART7: CULTURE 233 22 Cultural Influences on Adolescent Parenthood 235 23 Black Adolescent Parenthood 246 24 Latino Adolescent Parenthood 261 25 American Indian Adolescent Parenthood 269 26 Muslim Adolescent Parenthood 275 27 Hmong Adolescent Parenthood 280 PART8: SOCIETY 287 28 Impact of Adolescent Parenthood on Society 289 29 Programs for Adolescent Parents 295 30 Dampening and Amplifying Trends 313 PART9: SOLUTIONS 325 31 Preventing Adolescent Pregnancy and Parenthood 327 32 Valuing Parenthood 349 33 Parenthood Planning Teams and Certification of Parenthood 363 34 Adoption 380 PART10: CONCLUSION 403 Notes 413 Index 495 Preface Our personal experiences as adolescents are relevant for readers of this book. Each one of us had a unique experience during this formative stage of life. For me, reading Sigmund Freud’s Introductory Lectures to Psychoanalysis as an adolescent revealed that human motives are not always what they seem to be. Discovering hidden motives behind the façades of adult behavior appealed to me. This curiosity led me to become a psychiatrist. In order to understand the behavior of individuals, I need information ranging from molecules to environments. In order to understand the behavior of individuals in groups, I need information about families, societies and cultures. The living system and chaos/complexity theories help me make sense out of all of this information. Over forty-five years of clinical practice and research, I participated in the lives of many poor and affluent young people and their families. My interest is in connecting systems that influence them and their families—childcare, schools, neighborhoods, communities, health and mental health care, social services, law enforcement, courts and corrections. I was inspired to write this book by the growing strain on these sys- tems created by the intractable cycle of adolescent parents—the most preventable cause of crime and welfare dependency. My book Child Advocacy played a role in the child advocacy movement in the 1980s. I developed the child advocacy team that brought an interdisciplinary focus on the family into courts. Similarly formed coordinated service and wraparound teams now integrate public and private services for families in many communities across the nation. I learned that “child advocacy” actually diverted attention from the more important need for “family advocacy.” I began to refer to myself as a family psychiatrist and joined the parent licensing movement in 1990s. That brought both positive and nega- tive attention. I found that the word “family” is controversial and needs clarification. I decided to focus on public policies to strengthen “childrearing families.” All too often the words we use derail thoughtful dialog. Difficulty in finding the most appropriate language contributes to the lack of objective thinking about adoles- cent pregnancy and parenthood. It reflects the inherent ambiguity of adolescence as vii viii Preface the “child-adult” stage of life. Referring to adolescent girls and boys as “women” and “men” ignores adolescence as a vital developmental stage in life. Any words used to refer to minority groups can evoke positive and negative stereotypes. The words used in this book inevitably will evoke negative associations, especially “adolescence” and “adoption.” Adolescents may prefer to be referred to as “teenagers,” “teens,” “kids” or “youth” because “adolescence” connotes immaturity when they are trying to be mature. “Adoption” can evoke images of taking babies away from their mothers. Legal adulthood also complicates thinking about adolescence. Two-thirds of all adolescent mothers are eighteen and nineteen. They are at a different stage of adoles- cent development than those under eighteen. Although still adolescents, they are considered legal adults in most respects in our society. To further complicate matters, the term “woman” often is used to refer to a pregnant minor. Even “adolescent preg- nancy” takes the focus off the male contributor. In a broader sense, “sexually active” has replaced “promiscuous”; “affair” has replaced “adultery”; and “hooking up” has replaced “dating.” This book approaches cultural differences by referring to minorities, particularly those who live in poverty, as Asians, American Indians, Blacks, Hmong, Latinos and Muslims. Referring to the nation’s second largest minority group as colored, African- American, Negro, black or Black is an especially sensitive issue, although each of these terms have been used by Black luminaries.1 The term “white” is even more confusing because it covers a wide variety of back- grounds and is gradually being overshadowed by the “browning” of America. Lower case “black” and “white” often is used to de-emphasize racial backgrounds consistent with an effort to minimize racial differences between people. As did Beverly Tatum in her book Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria, I capitalize “Black” and “White” to follow the capitalization of “African-American” and the names of other ethnic groups and to acknowledge the fact that ethnic background is important.2 “Latino” is preferred over “Hispanic” by Latin America activists.3For them, Latino describes their cultures better than the language they speak. The term “American Indian” is ambiguous. It and “Native American” encompass all indigenous Indians on the American Continent but refer to Indians in the United States and Alaska, where the latter also may be referred to as Native Alaskans. Ethnicity does matter. For the sake of consistency, I capitalize ethnicity in the United States as American Indian, Asian, Black, Hmong, Latino, Muslim and White. There may come a time when ethnicity no longer matters, but we are not there yet. It is easy to overlook the importance of brain development in adolescents who appear to be young adults. Consequently, I refer to “teenagers,” “teens” and “youth” as “adolescents” and as “girls” and “boys.” I also refer to “infants” as “babies” to ac- knowledge the nurturing feelings they evoke. Referring to “babies” as “infants” makes it possible to deal with them as objects rather than as human beings. All of these words used to describe people still can be misinterpreted because of the sensitive nature of the topics addressed in this book. For this, I ask the reader’s indulgence. Preface ix I cite research in the social sciences recognizing that their methodologies cannot achieve the validity and reliability of research in the physical sciences. At the same time, I know that all physical and social science research is subject to bias. I ac- knowledge my bias in favor of the interests of babies, girls, boys and parents com- mitted to the career of parenthood. I hope that sharing my perspective will highlight the vital role of parenthood in our society and help to bring adolescent parenthood into public awareness as a public health crisis that can be resolved. Jack Westman Madison, Wisconsin

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This book addresses the discrepancy between efforts to prevent adolescent pregnancy and support of adolescent parenthood, which is arguably America's greatest unrecognized public health crisis. It proposes a feasible legal procedure as the basis for ensuring that adolescents' babies have competent p
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