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FEATURES: You've Come A Long Way, Daddy
By Wade Horn
Why the fatherhood ideal is making a comeback
The greatest social tragedy of the last
30 years has been the collapse of fatherhood. Propelled by the twin engines
of divorce and illegitimacy, the percentage of children growing up in a
home without their father nearly tripled between 1960 and the early 1990s.
By 1994, 24 million American children were living without their
biological fathers. But not to worry, we were increasingly told, all family
arrangements were equal and children could do just fine without their fathers.
Put simply, the modern family might need a village, but it no longer needed
a dad.
Then something remarkable happened. Suddenly and unpredictably, fatherlessness
began to be cited as the most disturbing and consequential social trend
of our time. Soon, football stadiums were filling with Promise Keepers,
busloads of African--American men were arriving in the nation's capital
for a "Million Man March," and news stories began to highlight regularly
the connection between absent fathers and such social ills as crime, educational
failure, and welfare dependency. Some observers were even talking about
the birth of a new social movement on behalf of fatherhood.
Collapse of Fatherhood
The retreat from fatherhood began in the 1960s, gained momentum in the
1970s, and hit full stride in the 1980s. Driving this collapse of fatherhood
were three ideas about parenting, fathers, and children. Ideas do have
consequences, and the cultural and social consequences of these ideas were
profound. Moreover, these notions became so entrenched in American culture
that, until recently, they obscured the obvious cause of so many social
disorders: absentee fathers.
The myth of the androgyny ideal. For much of the history of Western
civilization, differences between men and women were widely recognized
and even celebrated. As late as the 1950s, social scientists largely accepted
that men and women had biological differences that produced behavioral
differences. Men and women, it was thought, formed a natural complementarity
wherein each sex supported and strengthened the other. This idea was so
ingrained that, for much of this century, educators routinely reinforced
male and female distinctiveness and sex--role behavior.
But beginning in the 1960s, our recognition of gender distinctiveness
gave way to the ideal of androgyny. Out of a concern for greater social
equity, androgyny advocates preached that men and women ought not only
to be treated exactly the same, but to behave the same as well. Social
psychologist Sandra Bem was particularly influential in spreading the gospel
of androgyny, arguing that persons freed from traditional sex--role behavior
would be better adjusted, more adaptive, and psychologically healthier.
By 1980, according to a survey published in the American Journal of
Orthopsychiatry, 72 percent of mental--health professionals described
a "healthy, mature, socially competent" adult as androgynous.
The ideal of androgyny found fertile soil in the field of parenting
advice. Experts jettisoned the complementary model of childrearing and
exhorted mothers and fathers each to parent in exactly the same way. According
to many parenting gurus of the 1970s and 1980s, mothers and fathers should
parent so that a child would neither know nor care whether it was mom or
dad in the room.
Androgyny became the basis of the New Nurturing Father ideal, in which
a good father was defined as a man who shares equally in all childrearing
activities from the moment of birth. The New Nurturing Father was expected
not only to cry at movies, but to change precisely half the diapers and
fix his baby's formula as adeptly as he could fix a flat tire.
This view is now deeply ingrained in American culture--especially among
social-service providers. At a recent workshop I conducted on restoring
fatherhood, I was lectured by a social worker that it is not just incorrect,
but dangerous, to use the word "father." The correct term is "parent."
The androgynous father has proven to be an awfully uninspiring model
for most men. And no wonder. Essentially, the androgynous message says,
"Fathers, you are doing it wrong. To be a good father, you must be more
like mother." The result: fatherhood has been feminized, and the father
is disappearing from the home.
The myth of the superfluous father. Once androgyny advocates
established that most fathers were "doing it wrong," it became relatively
easy to argue fathers were not really necessary to the "modern" family.
Social scientists began to assert that there was a "nuclear family bias"
in past research, and exhorted fellow researchers and practitioners to
stop extolling the importance of a father--even a New Nurturing Father--to
the well--being of children. By 1982, psychologist Charlotte Patterson
of the University of Virginia felt assured enough to state flatly, "Children
don't need a father to develop normally."
Spurred on by radical feminist rhetoric, exemplified by Gloria Steinem's
quip that "a woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle," some even
began to assert that children actually did better without fathers.
In a 1982 study of father--absent households published in the Journal
of Marital and Family Therapy, Barbara Cashion claimed that girls growing
up without fathers are more independent, have higher IQs, and enjoy higher
self--esteem than girls growing up with fathers. This, according to Cashion,
is because "[t]he two--parent family is hierarchical with mother and father
playing powerful roles and children playing subordinate roles. In the female--headed
family there is no such division. Women and children forgo much of the
hierarchy and share more in their relationships. . . . There is a general
lack of conflict, and decisions are made more easily and quickly."
The advocacy on behalf of this idea of the superfluous father had its
intended effect. By 1994, 35 percent of men between 18 and 29 years old,
and 62 percent of women in the same age group, agreed with the statement,
"One parent can bring up a child as well as two parents." Indeed, by hearing
repeatedly that they are at best superfluous and at worst detrimental to
the well--being of children, men could now claim they were doing their
children a favor by leaving them solely in the hands of the mother.
The myth of resilient children. A final idea that contributed
to the decline of fatherhood in America was that children are resilient.
For much of human history, children have been seen as requiring tenderness,
affection, and protection from the adult world. This view of childhood
as a time of innocence and vulnerability led to the prevailing cultural
virtue that parents in troubled marriages ought to stay together "for the
sake of the kids." This does not mean that divorce is a recent invention;
indeed, divorce has been a part of mankind's experience throughout human
history. But it did place a natural braking mechanism on impulses to leave
one's spouse, which helped to keep divorce rates relatively low.
As pointed out by Barbara Dafoe Whitehead in her recent book The
Divorce Culture, this view of childhood posed a problem for the divorce
advocates in the 1970s. If children were vulnerable to stress and disruption,
how does one divorce without feeling guilty? The answer: Children are really
more resilient than we think. Divorce, and its consequent father absence,
may be painful at first, but the children will get over it. They are, after
all, just children.
Some even went further to suggest that divorce can be a self--actualizing
experience for children. In their 1974 book The Courage To Divorce,
authors Susan Gettleman and Janet Markowitz argued that "divorce can liberate
children," and can lead to "greater insight and freedom as adults in deciding
whether and when to marry" and to "break away from excessive dependency
on their biological parents." Similarly, in his 1973 book Creative Divorce:
A New Opportunity for Personal Growth, therapist Mel Krantzler stated
that divorce provides "an ambiguous, expanded experience that moves kids
to better adjustment in a society that is highly ambiguous and expanded."
The propagation of the "resilient child" myth was extraordinarily successful.
By 1977, 80 percent of respondents to a national survey disagreed with
the statement, "When there are children in the family, parents should stay
together even if they don't get along." Divorce rates nearly tripled between
1960 and the early 1980s, as adults found a way to avoid their guilt about
walking away from unsatisfying marriages. Today, nearly a million children
a year experience the "liberating effects" of divorce.
Turning the Tide
Beginning in the early 1980s, social scientists began to compile evidence
that would fundamentally challenge these three myths about parenting, fathers,
and children. First, developmental psychologists discovered that mothers
and fathers do approach parenting somewhat differently, and that these
differences may be beneficial to a child's development. Rather than finding
support for the notion that androgynous parenting was the ideal way to
raise children, researchers found that some degree of parenting specialization
was helpful.
Every
year, nearly a million American children
experience the "liberating
effects" of divorce.
For example, researchers consistently found that mothers tend to be more
verbal in their interactions with their children, fathers more physical.
That is, mothers like to talk to their babies, whereas fathers like to
play with them. During the height of the androgyny era, childrearing experts
often asserted that the physical play of fathers--so--called rough--and--tumble
play--was superfluous to childrearing. Consequently, many parenting experts
of the time exhorted fathers to stop playing with the kids and do more
housework. Some even asserted that the rough--and--tumble play of fathers
taught children aggression.
But research increasingly found that physical play with fathers gives
children practice in understanding how to regulate their own behavior and
helps them learn to recognize the emotional cues of others--two hallmarks
of a properly socialized child. Researchers also found that young children
need lots of verbal stimulation to develop the language centers of their
brains. Hence dads' style of parenting helps children develop self--regulation,
while that of moms helps children acquire language skills.
Social scientists also discovered that mothers tend to be stronger comforting
figures and fathers stronger disciplinarians. Since research has consistently
shown that children do best when reared with a combination of emotional
warmth and behavioral control, they depend for their well--being on a combination
of mothers' nurturance and fathers' discipline. The complementary nature
of two--parent families was making a comeback.
At the same time that developmental psychologists were rediscovering
the uniqueness of fathers, social demographers and family--policy analysts
were re--discovering their importance. Over the past decade, a voluminous
body of data has documented the ill effects of growing up without a father.
Fatherless children, for example, were found to be three times more likely
to fail at school, two to three times more likely to experience emotional
or behavioral problems requiring psychiatric treatment, and three times
more likely to commit suicide as adolescents. Fatherless children were
also five times more likely to be poor. But poverty alone failed to explain
the increased risk of poor outcomes associated with growing up without
fathers. Even after controlling for income, children with absent fathers
fared worse than those who grew up with both a mom and a dad.
As fathers were found to be more vital than previously thought, children
were also discovered to be more vulnerable. Beginning with the groundbreaking
work of psychologist Judith Wallerstein, clinical researchers began to
document that divorce or abandonment inflicts upon children not just temporary
strain, but long--term emotional and behavioral harm. Far from being resilient,
children were found to suffer forever when they don't live in forever families.
By the early 1990s, these research findings found their way into the
conclusions and recommendations of several widely disseminated and influential
studies of family policy. One of the earliest of these was "Putting Children
First: A Progressive Family Policy for the 1990s," published in 1990 by
the Progressive Policy Institute, a think tank affiliated with the Democratic
Leadership Council. Authored by Elaine C. Kamarck and William A. Galston,
both of whom later took high--ranking positions within the Clinton administration,
the report argued that the most consequential factor in the decline of
children's well--being was the collapse of the American family. The report
identified father absence as a primary culprit and recommended ways to
bolster the two--parent family by strengthening marriage and making divorce
less common.
The following year, the National Commission on Children released its
final report, "Beyond Rhetoric: A New American Agenda for Children and
Families." Relying heavily upon Kamarck and Galston, this report asserted
that "[c]hildren do best when they have the personal involvement and material
support of a father and a mother and when both parents fulfill their responsibility
to be loving providers." Even more remarkably, the report concluded that
"[t]here can be little doubt that having both parents living and working
together in a stable marriage can shield children from a variety of risk.
Rising rates of divorce, out--of--wedlock childbearing, and absent parents
are not just manifestations of alternative lifestyles, they are patterns
of adult behavior that increase children's risk of negative consequences."
The Birth of a Movement
Despite this accumulating evidence, nothing remotely resembling a fatherhood
movement, or even a "fatherhood consciousness," had yet appeared. This
changed dramatically as a result of 39 words uttered by a public figure
widely perceived at the time to be an intellectual lightweight: Vice President
Dan Quayle.
On May 19, 1992, while campaigning for re--election, Quayle made a speech
at the Commonwealth Club of California, in San Francisco, during which
he said, "It doesn't help matters when prime--time TV has Murphy Brown--a
character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid, professional
woman--mocking the importance of fathers by bearing a child alone and calling
it just another 'lifestyle choice.'"
Quayle may not have intended to inspire a national fatherhood movement,
but his speech and the reaction that followed galvanized others to defend
his larger point: that fathers matter to the well--being of children and
that society experiments with father absence at its peril. The first of
these spirited defenses was an extraordinarily influential article published
in the Atlantic Monthly magazine by social historian Barbara Dafoe
Whitehead. In "Dan Quayle Was Right," Whitehead laments that "every time
the issue of family structure has been raised, the response has been first
controversy, then retreat, and finally silence." Undaunted, she continues:
"How do we begin to reconcile our long--standing belief in equality and
diversity with an impressive body of evidence that suggests that not all
family structures produce equal outcomes for children?. . . How do we uphold
the freedom of adults to pursue individual happiness in their private relationships
and at the same time respond to the needs of children for stability, security,
and permanence in their family lives?"
The themes laid out in Whitehead's article were further refined and
expanded in a series of compelling articles and books, including Life
Without Father, by David Popenoe; New Expectations: Community Strategies
for Responsible Fatherhood, by James Levine and Edward Pitt; FatherLove,
by Richard Louv; and especially Fatherless America, by David Blankenhorn.
Particularly influential was a Wall Street Journal article by Charles
Murray entitled "The Coming White Underclass." Murray dramatically and
compellingly broadened the perception of father absence from merely a "black
family problem" to one that was quickly encompassing all of American society.
Seventy-nine
percent of Americans believe
the "most significant
family or social problem facing America
is the physical absence
of the father from the home."
These writings, in turn, spawned a renewed interest in programmatic activity
on the fatherhood issue, including skill--building initiatives, outreach
programs for unwed fathers, and public advocacy. Among the most important
of these efforts is the National Institute for Responsible Fatherhood and
Family Development, headed by Charles Ballard. Toiling for more than a
decade in inner--city Cleveland, this program deploys men from the local
community to work with young unwed fathers, many of whom have either dropped
out of school, are unemployed, or have substance--abuse problems. Using
a combination of parenting skills, education, and faith, this program has
been extraordinarily effective in encouraging young, mostly unwed, fathers
to re--enter the lives of their children and to support the mothers.
Another innovative fatherhood program that soon garnered national attention
was MADDADS. Headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska, this program began one spring
evening in 1989 when the 20--year--old son of John L. Foster staggered
home, badly beaten, blood streaming down his face. When Foster, a 45--year--old
African American, found out his son had been beaten by a gang of teenagers,
he loaded his .357 magnum and took to the streets looking for the culprits.
Luckily, he didn't find the gang of kids that had beaten his son, but that
night he did have an epiphany: "I was literally a mad dad and I
knew I wanted to organize strong black men who were willing to stand up
and fight this thing." The first man he recruited was Eddie Staton, and
the two of them decided that they had had enough of drug dealers, crack
addicts, and prostitutes in their neighborhood. Soon they had organized
a group of nearly 100 black men who began "father street patrols" to remove
graffiti and rid their neighborhood of lowlifes. Today, MADDADS claims
30,000 members in 49 chapters in 14 states, and its mission has been expanded
to include outreach to young fathers and mentoring of fatherless children.
Another, and by far the largest, fatherhood promotion effort is Promise
Keepers. Begun in 1990 by former University of Colorado football coach
Bill McCartney, Promise Keepers seeks to inspire men to be faithful husbands
and responsible fathers within a servant--leader model of marriage. The
message is clearly striking a responsive chord. The first gathering in
1991 drew 4,000 men; the next year 22,000 attended. By 1996, nearly 1.1
million men were attending Promise Keepers events at 22 stadiums around
the country. Promise Keepers headquarters now has a full--time staff of
more than 400, and an annual budget of nearly $100 million. In 1995, a
similar mass gathering of fathers, the Million Man March, brought nearly
three--quarters of a million black men together to celebrate their obligations
to family (although it appears not to have enjoyed the lasting influence
of Promise Keepers).
In addition to these individual efforts to reinvigorate fatherhood,
there emerged an increasing interest on the part of fatherhood advocates,
researchers, analysts, and programmers to come together and seek common
cause. These reformers first united under a single fatherhood banner at
the National Summit on Fatherhood in Dallas, Texas, in October 1994. Hosted
by the newly formed National Fatherhood Initiative, this gathering attracted
more than 200 fatherhood advocates, researchers and public--policy analysts,
education and skill building experts, advocates for low--income fathers,
and religious leaders. Other gatherings followed, including an Interfaith
Summit on Fatherhood, several state--wide, governor--sponsored conferences,
and a meeting in October 1996 in Minneapolis at which participants endorsed
a statement of principle for the fatherhood movement, entitled "A Call
to Fatherhood."
Today, there are literally dozens of national groups advocating on behalf
of fatherhood and hundreds more providing local support, encouragement,
and skill--building programs targeted at fathers. The National Fatherhood
Initiative, for example, conducts national and state--wide public education
programs building awareness of the irreplaceable contributions that fathers
make to the well--being of children; organizes local fatherhood forums;
and operates a National Clearinghouse and Resource Center, which provides
training and technical assistance to local organizations to implement a
fatherhood program.
The National Center for Fathering, headquartered in Kansas City, conducts
seminars for men on how to be more effective dads and provides training
to help social--service agencies meet the needs of fathers. The National
Centers on Fathers and Families, based at the University of Pennsylvania,
conducts research on programs that encourage the effective involvement
of fathers. And the Fatherhood Project of the Families and Work Institute,
located in New York City, provides information to employers on how they
can make their workplaces more father--friendly.
There are signs that this new "fatherhood movement" is starting to have
an impact. Surveys indicate that increasing numbers of Americans are getting
the fatherhood message. A 1996 Gallup Poll found that 79 percent of Americans
believe "the most significant family or social problem facing America is
the physical absence of the father from the home," up from 69 percent in
1992. Another recent survey found that 84 percent of men in their 30s and
40s agree that the definition of success is being a good father.
There is even evidence that this shift in attitudes is beginning to
translate into behavioral change. Since the mid--1980s, the divorce rate
has been decreasing. And last year, for the first time in two decades,
the percentage of children born out of wedlock actually declined by half
a percentage point. Families once again are making room for daddy.
Challenges Ahead
Still, challenges remain. Tonight, nearly 40 percent of all children
in America will go to bed in a home without their father available to read
them a bedtime story, bring them a glass of water, and give them a goodnight
kiss. Many millions more live with disconnected, neglectful, and sometimes
even abusive, fathers.
Furthermore, there is no guarantee that, even after accepting the importance
of fathers, we will head in the right direction. Many observers, while
agreeing that fathers are important, say that we must accept the realities
of out--of--wedlock childbearing and divorce, and work instead to ensure
that children receive financial support from their nonresident fathers.
Their solution is that we become more efficient at establishing paternity
and help nonresident fathers find employment so that they can meet their
child--support obligations.
Establishing paternity and enforcing child support are, of course, not
without merit. And a just and good society ought to do all it can to increase
job opportunities in low--income communities. But an emphasis on child
support ignores the many noneconomic contributions that fathers make to
the well--being of their children. Indeed, emphasizing fatherhood in largely
economic terms has helped to contribute to its demise. After all, if a
father is little more than a paycheck to his children, he can easily be
replaced by a welfare payment.
If we want fathers to be more than just money machines, we will need
a culture that supports their work as nurturers, disciplinarians, mentors,
moral instructors, and skill coaches, and not just as economic providers.
To do otherwise is to effectively downgrade fathers to, in the words of
Barbara Dafoe Whitehead, "paper dads."
Others suggest cohabitation as the solution to fatherlessness. In part
driven by the younger generation's simultaneous desire for intimacy and
fear of divorce, cohabitation as a form of "trial marriage" is one of the
fastest--growing family forms. Among 25-- to 34--year--olds, the percentage
of cohabiting couples in which children are present increased from 34 percent
in 1980 to 47 percent in 1993. Overall, 2.2 million children (roughly one
in seven) currently reside in cohabiting families.
We
have to convince men to delay fathering
children until after
they have established a committed
and enduring marriage.
But cohabitation before marriage actually makes subsequent marriages less
stable. In fact, divorce rates for couples who cohabit before marriage
are higher than for those who did not. Thus, the very solution toward which
many in the younger generation have gravitated in order to solidify long--term
relationships is, in reality, likely to weaken them.
Cohabitation is also unlikely to produce lifetime dads for children.
Although a quarter of nonmarital births occur to cohabiting couples, six
out of 10 cohabiting couples never go on to marry, and those who do are
more likely to get divorced than those couples who bear children within
marriage. For many children of cohabiting couples, dads are likely to become--at
best--only occasional visitors.
Fatherhood and Marriage
Although it is becoming increasingly popular to speak of the importance
of fathers to the well--being of children, it is still out of fashion to
speak of the importance of marriage to the well--being of fatherhood. Yet
research has consistently found that unmarried fathers, whether through
divorce or out--of--wedlock fathering, tend over time to become disconnected,
both financially and psychologically, from their children. About 40 percent
of children in father--absent homes have not seen their father in at least
a year. Of the remaining 60 percent, only one in five sleeps even one night
per month in the father's home. Overall, only one in six sees their father
an average of once or more per week. More than half of all children who
don't live with their fathers have never even been in their father's home.
Consequently, there is a growing chorus of voices within the fatherhood
movement singing the praises of marriage as the solution to the fatherhood
problem. The National Fatherhood Initiative in particular advocates the
promotion of marriage as a means of promoting fatherhood. For example,
together with the Hudson Institute we recently published a report on fathers
and welfare reform, which argued that low--income men are unlikely to be
responsible fathers unless state policies make low--income men more attractive
marital partners. States can do this by admitting them to job--placement
programs and granting preference to married couples in the distribution
of certain welfare benefits in limited supply, such as slots in public
housing and Head Start. The National Fatherhood Initiative will soon implement
a national monitoring project to find out what states and local communities
are doing to promote marriage and fatherhood within the context of welfare
reform.
This does not mean that all marriages are made in heaven; it does not
even mean that nonresident fathers cannot be good dads. But based on the
evidence, the inescapable conclusion is this: If we want to increase the
number of children growing up with involved and committed fathers, we will
have to convince men to delay fathering children until after they have
established a committed and enduring marriage.
The Beginning of the End . . . Perhaps
The good news is our culture is re--awakening to the idea that fathers
are important to the well--being of their children. Men are increasingly
likely to aspire to be loving, committed, and responsible fathers. And
there does seem to be a fatherhood movement emerging in America. But, at
the same time, millions of children still live without their fathers or
with dads who are all but absent. And too many men persist in believing
that marriage and involved fatherhood have little to do with each other.
The battle for fatherhood, therefore, while encouraging, is far from
over. In 1942, after the allies had won the battle for North Africa, Winston
Churchill cautioned his countrymen, "Now this is not the end. It is not
even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."
So it may be with fatherhood in America.
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