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TIMOTHY J.

BIBLARZ University of Southern California

JUDITH STACEY New York University*

How Does the Gender of Parents Matter?

Claims that children need both a mother and likely to end up in prison. They are more likely
father presume that women and men parent to have behavioral problems, or run away from
differently in ways crucial to development home, or become teenage parents themselves.
but generally rely on studies that conflate Barack Obama
gender with other family structure variables. We
analyze findings from studies with designs that In 1999 American Psychologist unleashed a
mitigate these problems by comparing 2-parent public furor when it published an article
families with same or different sex coparents that challenged a popular discourse on the
and single-mother with single-father families. dangers of fatherlessness. Deconstructing the
Strengths typically associated with married Essential Father (Silverstein & Auerbach,
mother-father families appear to the same extent 1999) contended that successful parenting is
in families with 2 mothers and potentially not gender specific and that children do
in those with 2 fathers. Average differences not need fathers, or mothers either, for that
favor women over men, but parenting skills matter. Rather, any gender configuration of
are not dichotomous or exclusive. The gender adults could parent well. The implication that
of parents correlates in novel ways with parent- fathers were expendable incited an uproar.
child relationships but has minor significance for Wade Horn (1999), soon to become Secretary
childrens psychological adjustment and social for Children and Families at the Department
success. of Health and Human Services, labeled the
article Lunacy 101: Questioning the Need for
Fathers, and other critics were more vitriolic
Fathers and mothers differ, just as males and
(e.g., Jacoby, 1999).
females differ.
David Popenoe Complex scholarly questions about the
significance of parental gender were lost in
We know the statisticsthat children who grow the firestorm, and the view that Silverstein
up without a father are five times more likely to
and Auerbach (1999) challenged continues to
live in poverty and commit crime; nine times more
likely to drop out of schools and twenty times more
dominate public policy. Thus, the 2006 New
York Court of Appeals ruling against same-sex
marriage found that the Legislature could
rationally believe that it is better, other things
Department of Sociology, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-2539 being equal, for children to grow up with both
(biblarz@usc.edu). a mother and a father. Intuition and experience
*Department of Sociology, New York University,
suggest that a child benefits from having before
295 Lafayette St., 4th floor, New York, NY 10012. his or her eyes, every day, living models of
Key Words: bisexual, development or outcomes, family
what both a man and a woman are like (Justice
structure, fathering, gay, gender, lesbian, parenting and Robert Smith in Hernandez v. Robles, 2006).
parenthood, transgender. Presidents from both political parties concur.
Journal of Marriage and Family 72 (February 2010): 3 22 3
DOI:10.1111/j.1741-3737.2009.00678.x
4 Journal of Marriage and Family

Former President Bush defended Floridas ban An unusually diffuse array of literatures bears
on gay adoption rights contending that studies indirectly on these questions: studies of primary
have shown that the ideal is where a child is caretaker married fathers; egalitarian coparent-
raised in a married family with a man and ing heterosexual couples; single mothers or
a woman (quoted in Bumiller, Sanger, & fathers after a death, divorce, or desertion; het-
Stevenson, 2005). President Obama endorsed erosexual single mothers by accident or choice;
stereotypical views about fathers in 2008: Of lesbian mothers and gay fathers after hetero-
all the rocks upon which we build our lives, sexual divorce; planned lesbian motherhood
we are reminded today that family is the most through donor insemination (DI) or adoption;
important. And we are called to recognize planned gay fatherhood through adoption, surro-
and honor how critical every father is to that gacy, or coparenting with women. Thus, to make
foundation. They are teachers and coaches. They headway on these issues we must extract scat-
are mentors and role models. They are examples tered kernels of empirical wheat from masses of
of success and the men who constantly push us extraneous chaff. We begin by identifying gen-
toward it (New York Times, 2008). res of research from which claims about gender
The argument that children need both a differences have been drawn and show that they
mother and father presumes that mothering and were not designed to address these questions, nor
fathering involve gender-exclusive capacities. are they capable of doing so. Next we analyze
The essential father is a disciplinarian, prob- studies that do bear on these questions. Finally,
lem solver, and playmate who provides crucially we suggest a research strategy to better address
masculine parenting. Boys need fathers, propo- intriguing unresolved questions.
nents claim (Blankenhorn, 1995; Popenoe, 1996;
Wilson, 2002), to develop appropriate masculine
Misleading Representations of Research
identity and to inhibit antisocial behaviors like
violence, criminality, and substance abuse; in Conventional understanding of gender differ-
contrast, fathers foster heterosexual femininity ences in parenting derives primarily from stud-
in daughters and help deter promiscuity, teen ies of married mothers and fathers. The gist
pregnancy, and welfare dependency. Dad is of this research is unsurprising: Most mar-
the grinding stone on which his son sharpens ried wives exceed their husbands relatively and
his emerging masculinity and the apprecia- absolutely on time spent in child care and
tive audience to which his daughter plays out domestic work and on most types of inter-
her femininity (Pruett, 2000, p. 87). Mothers action with their children (e.g., Hall, Walker,
provide nurturance, security, and caretaking. & Acock, 1995; Hawkins, Amato, & King,
The belief that research supports these con- 2006; Yeung, Sanberg, Davis-Kean, & Hof-
victions remains widespread. At the risk of ferth, 2001). Fathering among married cou-
inviting charges of Lunacy 201, we wish ples involves more breadwinning, stereotypical
to revive conversation among scholars about masculine tasks, and play with children (e.g.,
research on gender differences in parenting and Hawkins et al.). Married fathers generally spend
child development. Researchers agree that, on more time with sons than daughters (Harris,
average, women and men parent somewhat dif- Furstenberg, & Marmer, 1998; Marsiglio, 1991)
ferently, but they do not agree on the sources, and express greater interest in childrens gender
fixity, or consequences of these differences. conformity (e.g., Pruett, 2000). These patterns
Beyond lactation, are there exclusively female or have been softening over time (e.g., Bianchi,
male parenting abilities? Does female-only and 2000; Sandberg & Hofferth, 2001), and parent-
male-only parenting differ? Does fatherless or ing differences between families often exceed
motherless parenting create particular difficul- gender differences within families (e.g., Lytton
ties or opportunities for children, and are these & Romney, 1991). Despite stereotypes about
the same for girls and boys? Research provides fathers as disciplinarians, mothers physically
few unambiguous answers. punish children more often than fathers do
We undertake a careful review of relevant because they spend much more time caring
research to assess what it can contribute to for children. Relative to the amount of time
understanding how the gender of parents mat- spent caring for children, however, fathers com-
ters. There is no clearly identified body of mit more physical and sexual abuse (Sedlack &
research, however, to which we can easily turn. Broadhurst, 1996; Straus, 2001).
Gender of Parents 5

The research on married couples largely or with their mothers boyfriends. It ignored
reinforces what we already knowthat women research on lesbian and gay parenthood.
are more likely than men to commit to children, Because access to legal same-sex marriage is
relationships, and homemaking. What we do not so new and rare, we do not yet have research that
know is whether these average differences derive compares the children of married same-sex and
from gender per se, from heterosexual gender, different-sex couples. Even so, scholars have
or from other factors. Because these studies achieved a rare degree of consensus that unmar-
do not include single-sex parent families, they ried lesbian parents are raising children who
do not isolate the effects of parental gender, develop at least as well as their counterparts
as public officials, advocates, and even some with married heterosexual parents (e.g., Amer-
social scientists infer. Our two epigraphs about ican Academy of Pediatrics, 2002; Stacey &
parental gender differences and the distinctive Biblarz, 2001; Tasker, 2005).
role of fathers rest on a similar analytical Additionally, most family researchers agree
error. They draw inappropriately from studies that, all other things being equal, two parents
of divorce and single mothering and conflate (in a low-conflict relationship) generally pro-
findings on five distinct variables that interact vide more material and emotional resources
in complex waysnumber of parents, gender, to children than one parent (e.g., Amato,
sexual identity, marital status, and biogenetic 2005; McLanahan & Sandefur 1994). This
relationship to children. In a typical and weighty research, however, did not compare children
example of this error, an expert witness for in married-couple homes with children raised
the state of Washington drew on an extensive by same-sex couples. Moreover, too often it
review of the published research on the need that compared children in married-couple and single-
every child has for both a mother and a father parent families, thereby confounding the effects
(Satinover, 2004, p. 3) to oppose same-sex of number of parents with those of their mar-
ital history. None of this research investigated
marriage. The psychiatrist testified that research
whether the gender of the absent parent was
confirmed that children not raised by their
responsible for different child outcomes in
own married mother and father are subject to
single- versus two-parent families. Nonetheless,
increased risk of disadvantage and harm (p. 9).
consequential policy decisions rest on the view
He attested that quantifiable deficits occur in that [f]ew propositions have more empirical
literally every area of development (p. 10) support in the social sciences than this one:
in children who do not live with both their Compared to all other family forms, families
biological mother and father (p. 9). Almost headed by married, biological parents are best
all of the studies Satinover cited, however, for children (Popenoe, quoted in Center for
compared single-mother with married-parent Marriage and Families, 2006, p. 1).
families. None compared children raised by
two female parents with those raised by two
males or by one male and one female. None Research on Parental Sex Differences
compared primary-caretaker fathers and mothers and Child Outcomes
or children adopted by single men and women. Well, then, wheres the wheat? What research
Reputable social scientists have issued sim- literature contributes fruitful knowledge kernels
ilar misinterpretations of research. Prominent about sex differences in parenting? Surprisingly
scholars signed a report, Why Marriage few studies examined how the gender, as
Matters: Twenty-One Conclusions from the distinct from the number, marital status,
Social Sciences (Glenn, Nock, & Waite, 2002). sexual orientation, or biogenetic relationship of
Echoing errors in Satinovers (2004) affidavit, parents, affects children. No study attempted
the report analyzed research in which mari- to isolate the variable of parental gender
tal status, rather than gender, was the primary by holding constant these other factors. No
parental variable, but it conflated marriage with research compared planned parenting by couples
different-sex couples. To support its claim that composed of women only, men only, or a
a child who is not living with his or her own two woman and a man. No studies compared
married parents is at greater risk of child abuse single-parent adoptions by women and men.
(p. 17), the report cited studies of children who Consequently, the gender differences question
live alone with single mothers, in stepfamilies, requires an indirect, inductive approach. Two
6 Journal of Marriage and Family

bodies of research avoid some of these problems. be included, studies had to report findings on
Some studies explored parenting differences parenting or child outcomes, or both; statisti-
between biological, presumptively heterosexual, cally assess significance of differences between
single fathers and mothers. Here the gender groups; and compare families with the same
of parent varied, but the number, marital number of residential parents but different con-
status, and genetic relationship to children figurations of male and female parents. (An
did not. A related genre of studies explored appendix listing key methodological features
differences in parenting between married wives of each studypublication type, target popula-
and their husbands but did not compare tion, type and size of samples and comparison
single-sex with different-sex coparent families. groups, response rate, primary dependent vari-
The second, most germane body of research ables, method of data collection, and statistical
compared planned lesbian coparent families with approach to the datais available on the Journal
heterosexual married-parent families. Although of Marriage and Family website). We were
this research investigated the impact of sexual concerned about treating findings from studies
identity on parenting and children, it offers data that were somewhat weaker methodologically
more relevant to parental gender, particularly as equal to those from relatively stronger stud-
fatherlessness, because it compared families ies, so we experimented with rating studies on
that did and did not include male parents. A new methodological dimensions. Because studies of
promising avenue of research compared families the same dependent variables tended to log sim-
headed by lesbians to those headed by gay male ilar differences between groups even as their
parents (Johnson & OConnor, 2002). methodological strength varied, however, we
Although these research designs help to dis- include findings from all 33 studies of two-parent
entangle the gender of parents from the con- families and 48 studies of single-parent families.
founding variables of number and marital status, Thirty of the two-parent studies compared les-
they also have limitations. Studies that com- bian to heterosexual coparents, one compared
pared single (heterosexual) mothers and fathers gay male to heterosexual coparents, and two
rarely controlled effects of diverse routes to compared lesbian to gay male coparents.
single parenthoodchosen or accidental or via Most studies of heterosexual single-parent
the loss of a coparent through death, deser- families drew on surveys with national prob-
tion, or a divorce in which child custody was ability samples and self-administered ques-
contested or granted willingly. Studies that com- tionnaires. In contrast, comparative studies of
pared lesbian comothers (or gay cofathers) with lesbian and heterosexual coparent families typi-
heterosexual coparents, on the other hand, rarely cally employed snowball samples or drew from
could control for marital status or biological fertility clinic rosters of couples who employed
relatedness of both parents, and they could not DI. These usually included in-depth interviews
readily distinguish the impact of gender from and observations and employed psychometric
sexual identity. Moreover, these studies were instruments that assess the well-being of family
conducted in different states and nations with members and the quality of their relationships.
distinct and changing sociocultural and legal Although researchers who examine the impact
contexts for parenting, such as the Netherlands, of parental sex orientation on children reported
where same-sex marriage was legalized in 2001. few significant differences in child outcomes
between children raised by heterosexual and les-
bian couples (e.g., Tasker, 2005; Telingator &
METHOD
Patterson, 2008), the overwhelming public con-
Despite these limitations, a careful analysis of sensus is that children raised by both a mother
these two bodies of research sheds light on ways and father develop more successfully.
in which growing up with both a mother and a To vet all evidence that speaks to this coun-
father does and does not matter for children and terconsensus, we focus our analysis on the
our society. We examined all pertinent studies comparatively rare statistically significant find-
published from 1990 onward located through ings of difference between families with same-
database searches of PsychINFO, Sociological and different-sex parents or female versus male
Abstracts, JSTOR, and ProQuest; by pursuing parents. Tables 1 and 2 cross-classify findings of
references in published studies; and through difference from the 81 studies by whether they
personal contacts with family researchers. To involved two-parent (Table 1) or single-parent
Gender of Parents 7

Table 1. Findings of Significant Differences Between Two-Parent Couples and Their Children by Gender Mix of Couples in
33 Studies

Outcome Variables Direction Sources

Parental differences
Division of labor and relationship between partners
Degree to which partners share employment, child > Bos et al. (2007); Brewaeys et al. (1997);
care, family/household labor, decision making, > Chan, Brooks, et al. (1998); Ciano-Boyce
and/or participation in activities with children & Shelly-Sireci (2002); Fulcher et al.
(2008); McPherson (1993); Patterson et al.
(2004); Vanfraussen et al. (2003a)

Coparent prefers equal responsibility for child care > Chan, Raboy, et al. (1998); Patterson et al.
versus less responsibility for child care (2004)
Relationship satisfaction and compatibility with > Bos et al. (2004); Bos et al. (2007); Chan,
division of labor and/or partner as coparent Raboy et al. (1998)
> McPherson (1993)
> Johnson & OConnor (2002)
Rate of separation/divorce/breakup while parenting > MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Parenting and parent-child relationships
Intensity of desire to have a child; time spent > Bos et al. (2003); Bos et al. (2007)
reflecting on reasons for having a child
Parenting skills (such as parental awareness, concern, () > Bos et al. (2007); Brewaeys et al. (1997);
problem solving, availability, respect for childrens Flaks et al. (1995); Golombok et al.
autonomy, and quality of parent/child interaction) (1997);
MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Time spent in imaginative and domestic play, shared () > Golombok et al. (2003); Golombok et al.
interests, and activities with children (1997); MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Warmth, affection, attachment () > Golombok et al. (1997); Golombok et al.
(2003); MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Emphasis on gender conformity in children < Fulcher et al. (2008)
Emphasis on social conformity in children, limit () < Bos et al. (2004); Bos et al. (2007);
setting, disciplinary control MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Use of corporal punishment < Golombok et al. (2003)
Johnson & OConnor (2002)
>
Frequency of disputes with children () < Golombok et al. (1997)
Severity of disputes with children () > Golombok et al. (1997); MacCallum &
Golombok (2004)
Parents rate quality of relationship with daughters > Vanfraussen et al. (2003a)
higher than with sons
Experience of donor insemination and adoption
Parents openess about DI with children and others > Brewaeys et al. (1993); Wendland et al.
(1996)
Parents desire for donor anonymity < Brewaeys et al. (1993); Wendland et al.
(1996)
Proportion of children who are adopted > Sears & Badgett (2004); Sears et al. (2005)
Frequency of adopting girls > Ciano-Boyce & Shelly-Sireci (2002);
Shelley-Sireci & Ciano-Boyce (2002)
Frequency of cross-racial adoption > Ciano-Boyce & Shelly-Sireci (2002);
Fulcher et al. (2008); Shelley-Sireci &
Ciano-Boyce (2002)
8 Journal of Marriage and Family

Table 1. Continued

Outcome Variables Direction Sources

Child outcomes
Psychological and social well-being
Security of attachment to parents () > Golombok et al. (1997, 2003)
Perceives parents as available, dependable () > MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Discusses emotional issues (including own sexual > Vanfraussen et al. (2003a)
development) with parents
Interest, effort, success in school () > MacCallum & Golombok (2004);
Wainright et al. (2004)
Behavioral problems (especially among girls) (parent < Brewaeys et al. (1997); Gartrell et al.
and child reports) (2005); Vanfraussen et al. (2002)
Teacher ratings of childrens behavioral and attention > Vanfraussen et al. (2002)
problems
Likelihood of getting teased at school about their > Vanfraussen et al. (2002)
family configuration or own sexuality
Perception of own cognitive and physical competence () < Golombok et al. (1997)
Daughters rate quality of relationship with parents > Vanfraussen et al. (2003a)
higher than sons do
Gender and sexual behavior/preferences
Self-reported aggressiveness < Vanfraussen et al. (2002)
Feeling of own-sex superiority < Bos et al. (2006)
Parent or peer pressure to gender conform < Bos et al. (2006)
Tolerance of gender nonconformity in boys > Fulcher et al. (2008)
Girls aspirations to masculine occupations < Bos et al. (2006)
Girls heterosexual identity < Bos et al. (2006)
Boys gender flexibility () > Brewaeys et al. (1997);
MacCallum & Golombok (2004)
Note. () means sample from one or more studies cited included a mix of lesbian single mothers and couples. For every
finding of significant difference shown in Table 1, there were roughly four or more findings of no significant difference that
we do not display.
Sources: The 33 studies considered in Table 1 are Bos, van Balen, & van den Boom (2003, 2004, 2007); Bos, van Balen,
Sandfort, & van den Boom (2006); Brewaeys, Ponjaert, Van Hall, & Golombok (1997); Brewaeys, Ponjaert-Kristoffersen, Van
Steirteghem, & Devroey (1993); Chan, Brooks, Raboy, & Patterson (1998); Chan, Raboy, & Patterson (1998); Ciano-Boyce
& Shelley-Sireci (2002); Davis & Friel (2001); Drexler (2001); Flaks, Ficher, Masterpasqua, & Joseph (1995); Fulcher, Chan,
Raboy, & Patterson (2002); Fulcher, Sutfin, & Patterson (2008); Gartrell, Deck, Rodas, Peyser, & Banks (2001); Golombok
et al. (2003); Golombok, Tasker, & Murray (1997); Johnson & OConnor (2002); Kindle & Erich (2005); MacCallum &
Golombok (2004); McPherson (1993); Patterson, Sutfin, & Fulcher (2004); Perry et al. (2004); Rivers, Poteat, & Noret (2008);
Sears & Badgett (2004); Sears, Gates, & Rubenstein (2005); Shelley-Sireci & Ciano-Boyce (2002); Vanfraussen et al. (2002;
2003a); Wainright & Patterson (2006, 2008); Wainright, Russell, & Patterson (2004); Wendland, Bryn, & Hill (1996).

families (Table 2) and whether they pertained to occur by chance at p .05, as many as 20%
parents (top panel) or children (bottom panel). (5/25) of the findings shown might be noise.
The findings of difference we show are general On the other hand, some of the findings of no
summaries of numerous individual tests within differences may miss real differences (Type II
and across studies. Even so, for every find-
error) because some studies use levels of signif-
ing of significant difference in studies of same-
icance that may be too restrictive for their very
and different-sex coparent families, there were
roughly four or more findings of no significant small samples. Risking Type I error is less of a
difference that we do not display. Our focus on problem in studies that compare single mothers
findings of difference increases the risk of Type with single fathers because nearly half of these
I error. Because 5 of every 100 differences may tests for difference were statistically significant.
Gender of Parents 9

RESULTS samples included planned lesbian mothers,


Two-Parent Families 16 met our criteria for inclusion.
Although research on lesbian moms investi-
The research best suited for analyzing gender gated the impact of sexual identity on parenting,
differences in parenting compares heterosexual it contributes even more to understanding the
with lesbian and gay parenthood and has effects of gender. Lesbian couples who have
progressed markedly since we conducted a children with donor sperm or through adoption
systematic review in 2001 (Stacey & Biblarz). provide a natural experiment for assessing the
First, the shift we predicted from research on effects of growing up without a male parent.
unplanned to planned lesbian parenting is in full Such research can control for the number of
parents and their relational history. Since 2001,
swing. The children in most of the 21 studies we
the quality of the samples and data has advanced
reviewed in 2001 were born within heterosexual notably. New waves from longitudinal studies
marriages before one or both parents adopted on children approaching early adolescence have
a lesbian or gay identity, but newer research appeared (MacCallum & Golombok, 2004; Van-
has focused on lesbians who formed families fraussen, Ponjaert-Kristoffersen, & Brewaeys,
through DI or adoption. Of the 25 peer-reviewed 2002, 2003a, 2003b), and several studies attained
publications and dissertations we located whose larger, more representative samples (Bos, van
Table 2. Findings of Significant Differences Between (Presumptively Heterosexual) Single Mothers and Single Fathers and
Their Children in 48 Studies

Outcome Variables Direction Sources

Parental differences
Parenting and parent-child relationships
Supervision, involvement, rule setting, closeness, > Buchanan et al. (1992; 1996); Cookston (1999);
and/or communication/talking with children Demuth & Brown (2004); Downey & Powell
(1993); Eitle (2006); Hall et al. (1995);
Hawkins et al. (2006)
Parent reports difficulty remaining firm and patient > Clarke-Stewart & Hayward (1996); Hilton et al.
controlling childrens behavior (2001); Maccoby & Mnookin (1992)
Parent reports difficulty monitoring childrens school < Maccoby & Mnookin (1992)
progress, whereabouts, friends
Participation in PTA, school, religious events; knows > Downey (1994); Downey & Powell (1993);
names of childrens friends, friends parents Hawkins et al. (2006)
Playing sports, leisure activities away from home < Hall et al. (1995); Hawkins et al. (2006)
Takes child to doctor; has a usual health care provider > Leininger & Ziol-Guest (2008)
for child
Educational expectation for childa > Downey (1994); Downey & Powell (1993)
Visitation, interaction with noncustodial parent < Hawkins et al. (2006); Maccoby & Mnookin
(1992)
Child outcomes
Behavior and achievement
Educational expectations, grades, scores on > Buchanan et al. (1992, 1996); Battle (1998);
standardized testsa Battle & Scott (2000); Battle & Coates
(2004); Downey (1994); Downey & Powell
(1993); Downey et al. (1998); Powell &
Downey (1997); Pike (2002)
Teacher ratings of adolescents effort, behavior, > Downey et al. (1998); Downey & Powell (1993)
promise in schoola
Educational and occupational attainmenta > Battle & Coates (2004); Biblarz et al. (1997);
Biblarz & Raftery (1999); Powell & Downey
(1997); Downey et al. (1998)
10 Journal of Marriage and Family

Table 2. Continued

Outcome Variables Direction Sources

Adolescents substance abuse, misconduct, < Buchanan et al. (1992, 1996); Bjarnason,
delinquent behavior Andersson, et al. (2003); Bjarnason,
Davidaviceine, et al. (2003); Breivik &
Olweus (2006); Cookston (1999); Demuth &
Brown (2004); Downey & Powell (1993);
Downey et al. (1998); Eitle (2006);
Hoffmann (2002); Hoffmann & Johnson
(1998); Jenkins & Zunguze (1998); Juby &
Farrington (2001); Naevdal & Thuen (2004);
Powell & Downey (1997)
Parental reports of various health problems in > Bramlett & Blumberg (2007); Leininger &
children Ziol-Guest (2008)

a
Controlling for SES and other sociodemographic factors.
Sources: The 48 studies considered in Table 2 are Battle (1998); Battle & Coates (2004); Battle & Scott (2000); Biblarz
& Raftery (1999); Biblarz, Raftery, & Bucur (1997); Bjarnason, Andersson, et al. (2003); Bjarnason, Davidaviciene, et al.
(2003); Bowen, Orthner, & Zimmerman (1993); Brach, Camara, & Houser (2000); Bramlett & Blumberg (2007); Brievik
& Olweus (2006); Buchanan, Maccoby, & Dornbusch (1996); Buchanan, Maccoby, & Dornbusch (1992); Clarke-Stewart &
Hayward (1996); Cookston (1999); Demuth & Brown (2004); Downey (1994); Downey, Ainsworth-Darnell, & Dufur (1998);
Downey & Powell (1993); Eggebeen, Snyder, & Manning (1996); Eitle (2006); Flewelling & Bauman (1990); Grall (2006);
Hall et al. (1995); Hawkins et al. (2006); Heath & Orthner (1999); Hill & Hilton (1999); Hilton, Desrochers, & Devall (2001);
Hilton & Devall (1998); Hilton & Macari (1997); Hoffmann (2002); Hoffmann & Johnson (1998); Jenkins & Zunguze (1998);
Jonsson & Gahler (1997); Juby & Farrington (2001); Leve & Fagot (1997); Leininger & Ziol-Guest (2008); Luoma et al.
(1999); Maccoby & Mnookin (1992); Meyer & Garasky (1993); Naevdal & Thuen (2004); Pike (2002); Powell & Downey
(1997); Thomson, McLanahan, & Curtin (1992); Videon (2002); Wadsby & Svedin (1993); Weitoft, Hjern, Haglund, & Rosen
(2003); Zhan & Pandey (2004).

Balen, & van den Boom, 2003, 2004, 2007; adoptive parenting. To even consider concerns
Golombok et al., 2003; Rivers, Poteat, & Noret. about motherless parenting, we more tenta-
2008; Wainright et al., 2004; Wainright & Pat- tively discuss studies of gay male parents that
terson 2008). This research remains dispropor- did not meet all of our criteria.
tionately on White, middle-class families, partly
because they can better afford assisted repro-
ductive technology (ART) or to adopt children. When Two Women Parent
Although disappointing, this does not diminish A preliminary glance at the findings in the
the capacity of such research to speak to issues top panel of Table 1 confirms several gender
of parental gender among middle-class families. stereotypes, seeming to underscore the conclu-
Comparable research on intentional gay sions from research on heterosexual married
fatherhood, on the other hand, has scarcely parents. Motherswhether heterosexual or les-
commenced. A first generation of studies investi- bian and biologically related to their children
gated decision making, parenting arrangements, or nottypically spent more time than het-
and identities of gay men who chose parent- erosexual fathers on children and family and
hood (e.g., Beers, 1996; Dunne, 1999; Schacher, less on paid work (e.g., Brewaeys, Ponjaert,
Auerbach, & Silverstein, 2005; Stacey, 2006). Van Hall, & Golombok, 1997; Fulcher, Sutfin,
Only one (McPherson, 1993) compared gay male & Patterson, 2008; Vanfraussen et al., 2003a).
with heterosexual couples, and one (Johnson & More women than men desired egalitarian par-
OConnor, 2002) compared them with lesbian enting and work responsibilities, and lesbian
parents. We located no studies of planned gay coparents seemed to come closer than het-
fathers that included child outcome measures erosexual coparents to achieving this (Chan,
and only one (Kindle & Erich, 2005) that com- Brooks, et al., 1998; Fulcher et al., 2008). That
pared gay male with lesbian or heterosexual helps explain why lesbian couples generally
Gender of Parents 11

coparented more compatibly and with greater parenting without the benefits of marriage
satisfaction than heterosexual couples (e.g., Bos scored higher on several measures than married,
et al., 2004, 2007). Several studies in Table 1 heterosexual, genetic parents. Gender seemed
found that female parents scored higher than to predict successful, involved parenting better
heterosexual men on parenting awareness skills than marriage or genetic parentage did.
and developed warmer, closer, more commu- Upon closer inspection, however, several
nicative relationships to their children (e.g., studies complicate this picture. A longitudinal
Bos et al., 2007; Flaks, Ficher, Masterpasqua, study in the United Kingdom (Golombok et al.,
& Joseph, 1995; Golombok, Tasker, & Murray, 1997; MacCallum & Golombok, 2004) directly
1997). More lesbian than infertile heterosexual, studied the effects of fatherless parenting by
DI coparents told their children how they were matching three sets of families on demographic
conceived (Brewaeys, Ponjaert-Kristoffersen, and economic factorsfamilies headed by
van Steirteghem, & Devroey, 1993; Wendland, lesbians, single heterosexual mothers who
Bryn, & Hill, 1996; Vanfraussen et al., 2003b). parented alone since infancy, and heterosexual
Two mothers tended to play with their chil- two-parent families. Unfortunately for our
dren more (e.g., Golombok et al., 2003) and to purposes, the study lumped lesbian single and
discipline them less than married heterosexual coparent families together and compared these
parents. They were less likely to employ corporal with two-parent heterosexual families. This
punishment, to set strict limits on their children, makes it impossible to disentangle the number
or try to elicit social (and gender) conformity and gender of the parents. Nonetheless, women
(Bos et al., 2004, 2007; Johnson & OConnor, parenting without men (whether lesbian or
2002; MacCallum & Golombok, 2004). (Differ- heterosexual, solo or coupled) scored higher
ences between means were generally a half to on warmth and quality of interactions with
three quarters of a standard deviation.) their children than not only fathers but also
In other words, two women who chose to mothers who coparent with husbands. On the
become parents together seemed to provide other hand, mothers and children in the father-
a double dose of a middle-class feminine absent families reported conflicts more severe
approach to parenting. Some research sug- but somewhat less frequent than in father-
gests, however, that a double dose of mater- present families (about 0.5 SD higher and lower,
nal investment sometimes fostered jealousy respectively). If these findings prove valid,
and competition between comothers, which the they imply that parenting without men may
asymmetry of the womens genetic, reproduc- enhance feminine dimensions of parenting
tive, and breast-feeding ties to their infants but also might release women from some
could exacerbate (Chrisp, 2001; Gartrell et al., gender constraints, with contradictory results.
2000; Reimann, 1998; Stiglitz, 1990). Also, It may free women to express more feminine
although lesbian comothers shared parenting forms of nurturance while compelling them
more equally than other couples, they rarely to assume more masculine financial and
achieved parity (Chrisp; Reimann). Similar disciplinary roles, as sociological research
to research on heterosexual parents, studies suggests (Reimann, 1998; Sullivan, 2004). Such
found that lesbian biological mothers typically mothers may develop closer ties but also greater
assumed greater caregiving responsibilities than conflict with their children than when mothers
their partners (Brewaeys et al., 1997; Johnson & coparent with fathers.
OConnor, 2002) and enjoyed greater intimacy One finding in Table 1 implies that the supe-
with their children (Bos et al., 2007; Wainright rior qualities of lesbian coparenting may exact a
et al., 2004). paradoxical toll. Although research consistently
Nonetheless, gender appears to trump the indicates that such couples enjoy greater equal-
influence of biological parentage. Just as ity, compatibility, and satisfaction with their
heterosexual mothers generally scored higher partners than their heterosexual counterparts,
on parenting than fathers, findings in the top preliminary data hint that their relationships may
panel of Table 1 favor the parenting practices prove less durable. The data are still far too lim-
of lesbian coparents, only one of whom is a ited to merit confidence (e.g., over about 5 years,
biological parent, over heterosexual biological 6 of MacCallum and Golomboks [2004] 14 les-
parenting couples. Studies also indicated that bian parent couples had broken up compared
gender even trumps marital status. Two women with 5 of 38 heterosexual parent couples; see also
12 Journal of Marriage and Family

Bos, Gartrell, van Balen, Peyser, & Sandfort, more equally and compatibly than heterosex-
2008; Vanfraussen et al., 2003b), but several ual couples, although somewhat less equally
factors lend plausibility to this finding. First, than lesbians. Likewise, McPherson, as well as
because most same-sex couples lack access to studies not included in Table 1 (Mallon, 2004;
legal marriage and receive less familial, cultural, Scallen, 1982), found gay men less inclined
and institutional support for their relationships, than heterosexual couples to promote gender
they generally face fewer barriers to exiting conformity in children, but somewhat more so
unsatisfying unions. Secondly, unequal biologi- than lesbians. Johnson and OConnor found gay
cal and legal bases to parental status can create male parents less likely to spank their chil-
distinctive fissures among lesbian comothers. dren than heterosexual couples and, surprisingly,
Finally, the comparatively high standards les- even somewhat less than lesbian parents. Other
bians bring to their intimate unions correlate studies indicated that when two gay men copar-
with higher dissolution rates. Married hetero- ented, they did so in ways that seem closer, but
sexual couples with egalitarian orientations face not identical, to that of two lesbian women than
similar risks (Brines & Joyner, 1999; Lye & to a heterosexual woman and man (Brinamen,
Biblarz, 1993). 2000; Mallon; Stacey, 2006).
Research among heterosexual married par- Perhaps it is more accurate to say that par-
ents has found that new parenthood typically enting by gay men more closely resembles that
precipitates high degrees of stress and declining by mothers than by most married, heterosexual
marital satisfaction (Cowan & Cowan, 1992). fathers. After all, most gay men who choose
A study of the transition to parenthood among to parent, like heterosexual fathers who win
lesbian couples likewise found rising conflict custody after divorce, are choosing primary
and declining expressions of love (Goldberg & responsibility for parenting; they engage, in
Sayer, 2006). Among heterosexuals, new par- other words, in what has conventionally been
enthood reinforced traditional gender divisions understood as mothering. A gay father in one
of labor and power (Cowan & Cowan; Kurdek, study (Mallon, 2004) put it:
2001) and incited greatest dissatisfaction among
women who scored lower on femininity scales As a gay dad, Im not a mom, but sometimes I
(Lenz, Soeken, Rankin, & Fischman, 1985). think I have more in common with moms than I do
with straight dads. I mean, these straight dads that
Lesbian DI comothers strike us as particularly
I know are essentially weekend dads; they dont
vulnerable to these disruptive effects. They gen- parent with the same intensity that I do or that their
erally value egalitarian relationships more than wives do. In many ways, despite being a man, I
other couples but confront asymmetrical legal, am a dad, but I am like a mom too. (p. 138)
biological, and cultural ties to children that can
exascerbate maternal competition and jealousy Likewise, 6 of the 10 gay male parents in another
under conditions that reduce barriers to exit- study (Brinamen, 2000) considered themselves
ing. Access to equal legal parental status and mothers and were comfortable accepting the
rights should mitigate but not eliminate these title (p. 67). Paths to parenthood available to
asymmetries. We speculate that a double dose gay menadoption, foster care, surrogacy, or
of feminine socialization, coupled with discrim- coparenting with women friendsdemand far
ination, can lead Heathers two mommies to be greater motivation than heterosexual men or
among the best, but also somewhat less durable, even women need to become parents. Gay men
coparenting couples. who clear this high bar are a select group who
deviate from conventional hetero-masculinity
and from cultural stereotypes about gay male
When Two Men Parent
lifestyles as well (Stacey, 2006).
The slim body of research on gay male copar- On the other hand, preliminary data hint that
ents suggests they do not provide a double dose gay male parents may also differ somewhat
of masculine parenting. Instead, they also from lesbian and heterosexual mothers. Some
appear to adopt parenting practices more femi- research reported that lesbian mothers dispro-
nine than do typical heterosexual fathers. Only portionately prefer to have daughters (Chrisp,
two studies qualified for inclusion in Table 1 2001; Dundas & Kaufman, 2000; Gartrell et al.,
(Johnson & OConnor, 2002; McPherson, 1993), 1996), but studies of gay men suggest they
and both found that gay male couples parented may be more likely than women, but less likely
Gender of Parents 13

than heterosexual men, to desire sons (Brina- found that children with two mothers viewed
men, 2000; McPherson, 1993; Sbordone, 1993). their parents as more available and dependable
Gay male parents also tend to earn more and to (MacCallum & Golombok, 2004) and another
remain more committed to full-time employment that they were more likely to discuss emotional
than female parents, but less so than heterosexual issues (Vanfraussen et al., 2003a). One study
fathers (Sears, Gates, & Rubenstein, 2005). On (Vanfraussen et al., 2002) reported this family
the other hand, some data suggested that more structure constrained aggressive behavior in sons
gay dads are at-home parents than lesbian moms as well as daughters. If future research replicates
(Bellafante, 2004). Gender and sexual iden- these findings, it will pose substantial challenges
tity interact so that gay male parents challenge to the view that children need both a female and
dominant practices of masculinity, fatherhood, male primary parent for optimal development.
and motherhood more than lesbian co-mothers The few negative findings for children
depart from normative femininity or maternal with two mothers were equivocal. Teachers
practice (see Stacey, 2006). in a Belgian study (Vanfraussen et al., 2002)
reported more attention and behavior problems
for such children (about a half standard
Heather and Her Siblings deviation difference), but this did not match
How do these parental gender differences teachers ratings of the childrens adjustment,
matter for children? An answer to this question and neither the children nor their mothers
is the brass ring above the family policy concurred. A second more plausible finding
carousel and inordinately slippery to grasp. was that such children reported being teased
Research consistently has demonstrated that about their families more, but this speaks
despite prejudice and discrimination children to social disapproval of their parents sexual
raised by lesbians develop as well as their peers identity rather than their gender. Researchers
(Tasker, 2005). Across the standard panoply of consistently find that children with lesbian
measures, studies find far more similarities than parents contend with homophobia among their
differences among children with lesbian and peers, but disagree over whether these children
heterosexual parents, and the rare differences suffer more teasing overall or if the teasing
mainly favor the former. To assess effects of the focuses on their parents sexual identity (Bos
gender of parents, however, Table 1 omits the et al., 2008; Tasker & Golombok, 1997;
ubiquitous findings of no differences and focuses Wainright & Patterson, 2008). The only clear
instead on the infrequent findings of difference negative finding appeared in the first wave of the
that might conceivably derive from parental UK study of fatherless families described above
gender. The bottom panel displays findings from (Golombok et al., 1997). Six-year-old children
comparative studies of children coparented from in mother-only families (whether lesbian or
infancy by two women and by heterosexual heterosexual) described themselves as less
couples and yields an ambiguous portrait of competent physically and cognitively than their
outcomes. Of the 16 significant findings, 8 peers (0.75 SD averaging the two), but the
represent comparative benefits and 3 modest difference disappeared when the children were
risks from this form of fatherlessness. The interviewed again 6 years later (MacCallum &
valence of the remaining 5 items rests in the Golombok, 2004). Because this study did not
eyes of the beholder, and more of these strike control for the number of parents in mother-only
our eyes as benefits than burdens. Research on families, it could not help us determine whether
planned lesbian parenting demonstrates that the the absence of a male parent or just of a second
impact of this form of radical fatherlessness parent contributed to the lower self-esteem the
(Blankenhorn, 1995) on children is far from younger children expressed.
radical, not always fatherless, and arguably more The remaining findings of difference con-
beneficial than not. cerned gender and sexuality and bear directly
Studies in the bottom panel of Table 1 on public discourse on fatherlessness. A recent
found greater security of attachment and fewer study in the United States (Fulcher et al., 2008)
behavior problems overall in children parented reported, predictably, that both boys and girls
by two mothersgaps on the order of 0.66 raised by two mothers were somewhat more tol-
to 0.75 SD (Brewaeys et al., 1997; Golombok erant of gender nonconformity in peers. More
et al., 1997; Vanfraussen et al., 2002). One study intriguing, in the UK study (MacCallum &
14 Journal of Marriage and Family

Golombok, 2004), 12-year-old boys in mother- removing constraints on the feminizing effects
only families (lesbian or heterosexual) did not of the closer mother-daughter bond. Vanfraussen
differ from sons raised by a mother and father et al. (2003a) also speculated that the pres-
on masculinity scales but scored over a stan- ence of two female figures may strengthen the
dard deviation higher on femininity scales. Thus, female socialization process for girls in lesbian
growing up without a father did not impede mas- households (p. 88).
culine development but enabled boys to achieve If, as we expect, future research replicates
greater gender flexibility. This was true for sons the finding that fatherless parenting fosters
of lesbians and single heterosexual mothers, greater gender flexibility in boys, this repre-
implying an association with the gender rather sents a potential benefit. Research implies that
than the sexual identity of parents. This study adults with androgynous gender traits may enjoy
found no comparable effects of fatherlessness on social psychological advantages over more gen-
daughters. Girls in mother-only families did not der traditional peers (Bigner, 1999). Likewise,
differ on femininity or masculinity scales from the Dutch study (Bos et al., 2006) found that
girls raised by a mother and father. boys who scored higher on conventionally femi-
A Dutch study (Bos, van Balen, Sandfort, nine traits achieved better adjustment scores than
& van den Boom, 2006) on gender develop- boys with lower feminine scores, whether their
ment, however, reported contrary, counterintu- parents were two women or a woman and a man.
itive results. Sons in the two family types did The picture might have become murkier were
not differ on gender behavior or identity, occu- we also able to consider research on motherless
pational aspirations, or peer pressure to conform parenting. We lack data on the impact of planned
to gender norms. Boys parented by lesbians, gay fatherhood on child gender outcomes, but
however, displayed less gender chauvinism than some research on divorced gay fathers suggested
boys parented by heterosexual couples. Perhaps that they also seemed to promote greater gender
their positive experiences with fatherless par- flexibility in sons than do heterosexual fathers
enting made them less likely to consider boys (Bigner). Thus, it may not be fatherlessness that
superior to girls. Yet daughters did differ more, expands gender capacities in sons but hetero-
and in surprising ways. Girls with two moth- sexual fatherlessness. When gay men, lesbians,
ers aspired to similar feminine occupations or heterosexual women parent apart from the
but expressed fewer masculine occupational influence of heterosexual masculinity, they all
aspirations than girls with married heterosexual seem to do so in comparatively gender-flexible
parents. Like their brothers, they displayed less ways that may enable their sons to break free
gender chauvinism than peers. These father- from gender constraints as well (see Drexler &
less daughters were less likely than daughters Gross, 2005).
of heterosexual couples to view girls as supe- We know very little yet about how parents
rior to boys. Unexpectedly, they reported feeling influence the development of their childrens
less pressure from peers (or, predictably) from sexual identities or how these intersect with
parents for gender conformity. gender. An important longitudinal British study
We found surprising the implication that (Tasker & Golombok, 1997) that did not meet
fatherlessness had trivial influence on gender criteria for inclusion in Table 1 compared chil-
development in children generally and partic- dren brought up by lesbian and straight mothers
ularly that it encouraged gender flexibility in after divorce. On the basis of interviews with the
boys more than girls. Because womens parent- children in young adulthood, the study reported
ing practices are generally more gender neutral no differences in sexual attractions or identities,
than mens and women who parent without men but significantly more daughters of lesbians, but
assume paternal responsibilities, we expected not sons, had considered or engaged in homo-
their daughters to receive an equivalent boost sexuality. The study had a small sample, the
toward androgynous interests. If such findings confounding effects of divorce, and did not con-
prove valid, they suggest that, instead, father- trol for number of parents. The newer Dutch
lessness might remove pressure toward gender study, however, compared a larger sample of
conformity that heterosexual fathers impose preadolescent children raised by planned lesbian
particularly on sons. If heterosexual fathers and heterosexual couples and reported compati-
are more involved with sons than daughters, ble data (Bos et al., 2006). It found no differences
father absence might affect daughters less, while in heterosexual identity scores for sons with two
Gender of Parents 15

mothers. Daughters of lesbian mothers, how- stable employment, and better returns to educa-
ever, scored 0.75 SD lower on heterosexual tion than single mothers (e.g., Biblarz & Raftery,
identity than daughters of heterosexual couples. 1999; Bramlett & Blumberg 2007; Hoffmann &
We need comparable data for children reared Johnson, 1998; Leininger & Ziol-Guest 2008).
by single heterosexual mothers or exclusively Single fathers received more social support than
by men to distinguish the impact of gender single mothers (e.g., Clarke-Stewart & Hayward,
from sexual identity here. Did having exclu- 1996; Hilton & Kopera-Frye, 2007), parented
sively female parents or lesbian parents reduce fewer residential children, and were more likely
preadolescent daughters expectations for future to be White and older and less likely to receive
heterosexual relationships? The fact that lesbian public assistance (Zhan & Pandey, 2004). Sin-
parenting did not diminish heterosexual desires gle mothers shouldered relative disadvantages
in sons supports research finding greater fixity in on every socioeconomic dimension and on some
male and fluidity in female sexual desires over dimensions of stress and psychological well-
the life course (Butler, 2005; Diamond, 2008). being as well (Hilton, Desrochers, & Devall,
The lower heterosexual identity scores of these 2001; Hill & Hilton, 1999). Even so, Ziol-
girls (but not their brothers) might reflect this Guest, DeLeire, and Kalil (2006) found that
gender difference. single mothers devoted a greater share of their
household food expenditures to grains, vegeta-
Single-Parent Families bles, fruit, and milk, whereas single fathers spent
more on food away from home and on alcohol.
By holding the number of parents constant while Yet studies rarely statistically accounted for
varying their gender, comparative studies of pathways to single parenthood. Unfortunately,
single moms and dads also can offer leverage no research compared single mothers and single
in detecting how single-sex parenting affects fathers who adopted children in infancy. This
childrens development. Unfortunately, vastly
design would substantially reduce selection
different processes select men and women into
processes that differentially sort men and women
single parenthood, and many of these selection
into single parenthood.
effects are impossible to measure or control
Nonetheless, differences reported in the 48
for. Some factors put single fathers at a dis-
studies (Table 2) that compared parenting by
advantage. Single-father households tended to
be newer and inhabited by children who had single mothers and fathers mirrored those
switched custody arrangements (e.g., Buchanan, between married moms and dads. The top
Maccoby, & Dornbusch, 1992, 1996). Single panel of Table 2 shows that when socioeco-
fathers more often received custody of boys, nomic attributes were held constant, more single
older children, and those with behavioral prob- mothers than fathers were skilled at develop-
lems (Grall, 2006; Maccoby & Mnookin, 1992; mental styles of parenting and actively involved
Meyer & Garasky, 1993). Single-father families with their children. Like married mothers, they
often formed when mothers lacked interest in spent more time with children talking and par-
parenting, lost custody because of neglect or ticipating in school-related events (though less
abuse, or when their children actively sought to time in sports), and they displayed more affec-
live with their fathers (e.g., Hamer & Marchioro, tion and warmth (e.g., Buchanan et al., 1992,
2002) because of conflicts with mothers, step- 1996; Hawkins et al., 2006; but see Thomson,
fathers, or their mothers partners. Most single McLanahan, & Curtin, 1992, for an exception).
fathers were widowers or divorced. Divorced, More single mothers than fathers knew the
custodial, single fathers more frequently sued for names of their childrens friends and parents,
custody, whereas mothers frequently gained cus- participated in PTA, and monitored childrens
tody through mutual agreement (Grall). Women homework (e.g., Downey, 1994; Hawkins et al.;
more often became single parents intentionally, Maccoby & Mnookin, 1992). Single mothers
through planned or unplanned pregnancies, and more often than single fathers reported that their
were more likely than heterosexual fathers never children had health problems, took them to a
to have been married (Hertz, 2006). doctor, and had (usually public) health insur-
Other selection factors disadvantaged single ance (Bramlett & Blumberg 2007; Leininger &
mothers. Single fathers generally enjoyed higher Ziol-Guest 2008). It is unclear whether their
incomes and job status, lower poverty rates, more children actually had more health problems or
16 Journal of Marriage and Family

if single mothers were more likely to notice and Demuth & Brown, 2004; Naevdal & Thuen,
respond to such problems. 2004; Videon is an exception). Several studies
Single-parent studies did not support popu- reported that children in single-father families
lar claims that fathers are better able to keep abused alcohol, marijuana, and other substances
boys in line or command authority and respect more than children with single mothers (e.g.,
from their children. Surprisingly, studies more Bjarnason, Andersson, et al., 2003; Hoffmann &
often found that single mothers achieved greater Johnson, 1998). Findings on childrens achieve-
parental control, in part through more rule set- ments were similar. Adolescents living with
ting and supervision (e.g., Demuth & Brown, single mothers exhibited higher security of
2004). Maccoby and Mnookin (1992) found that, attachment, fewer behavioral problems, higher
although more custodial mothers than fathers test scores, and higher educational expectations
expressed difficulty remaining firm and patient, than those living with comparable single fathers
they reported less difficulty monitoring chil- (e.g., Battle, 1998; Downey, Ainsworth-Darnell,
drens school progress, health habits, friends, & Dufur, 1998; Pike). Evidence suggested that
and interests. Yet single fathers also displayed they achieved higher educational attainment and
some maternal capacities that seemed to occupational status as well (e.g., Biblarz &
remain latent in married dads when women Raftery, 1999; Powell & Downey, 1997).
were around to provide them. Hawkins et al. Greater maternal involvement, support, and
(2006) showed that the gap between married control may underlie their childrens modest
mothers and fathers involvement with children advantages. Studies by Demuth and Brown
was roughly twice that between single moth- (2004) and Buchanan et al. (1992, 1996), for
ers and fathers. Single fathers scored higher example, found that comparatively lower levels
on parenting scales, did more housework, and of supervision, involvement, and closeness by
enjoyed warmer, more verbal relations with their single fathers partly explained their childrens
children than married fathers (Hilton & Devall, higher delinquency and adjustment difficulties.
1998; Hilton et al., 2001). Risman (1987) found If contemporary mothering and fathering seem
that parenting behavior of fathers who coped to be converging and fathers often rise to
with unexpected single parenthood converged the occasion when circumstances demand or
with mothering. They did not, however, fully opportunities allow, research shows that sizable
close the gap with women who parented alone average differences remain that consistently
(Hawkins et al.). favor women, inside or outside of marriage.

Children From Heterosexual Single-Parent DISCUSSION


Families
Family Ideals and Ideal Families
The relative parenting strengths of heterosex-
ual single mothers reported in the top panel The entrenched conviction that children need
of Table 2 often translated into more positive both a mother and a father inflames culture wars
child outcomes. Of course, children raised by over single motherhood, divorce, gay marriage,
male and female single parents were similar and gay parenting. Research to date, however,
on many dimensions, including mortality and does not support this claim. Contrary to popular
morbidity risks, relationships with peers, and belief, studies have not shown that compared to
psychiatric symptoms (e.g., Pike, 2002; Videon, all other family forms, families headed by mar-
2002; Weitoft, Hjern, Haglund, & Rosen, 2003; ried, biological parents are best for children
Clarke-Stewart & Hayward, 1996, is an excep- (Popenoe, quoted in Center for Marriage and
tion). Single mothers suppressed problematic Family, p. 1). Research has not identified any
behavior more successfully than single fathers, gender-exclusive parenting abilities (with the
however. Counterintuitively again, findings con- partial exception of lactation). Our analysis con-
tradicted stereotypical claims that masculinity firms an emerging consensus among prominent
better equips fathers to inhibit antisocial behav- researchers of fathering and child development.
ior in children. Most studies found that children The third edition of Lambs (1997) authorita-
from single-mother families averaged lower tive anthology directly reversed the inaugural
rates of delinquency than children with sin- volumes premise when it concluded that very
gle fathers (e.g., Breivik & Olweus, 2006; little about the gender of the parent seems to be
Gender of Parents 17

distinctly important (p. 10). Likewise, in Fath- induces fathers to behave more like mothers,
erneed, Pruett (2000), a prominent advocate of the reverse may be partly true as well. Women
involved fathering, confided, I also now real- who parent without men seem to assume some
ize that most of the enduring parental skills are conventional paternal practices and to reap emo-
probably, in the end, not dependent on gender tional benefits and costs. Single-sex parenting
(p. 18). seems to foster more androgynous parenting
Evaluating the importance of being parented practices in women and men alike.
by both a female and a male parent requires Every family form provides distinct advan-
research on families with the same number and tages and risks for children. Married heterosex-
status but a different gender mix of parents. Our ual parents confer social legitimacy and relative
review of research closest to this design suggests privilege but often with less paternal involve-
that strengths typically associated with mother- ment. Comothers typically bestow a double dose
father families appear at least to the same degree of caretaking, communication, and intimacy. We
in families with two women parents. We do suspect, however, that their asymmetrical bio-
not yet have comparable research on children logical and legal statuses and their high standards
parented by two men, but there are good reasons of equality place lesbian couples at somewhat
to anticipate similar strengths among male greater risk of splitting up. Gay male parent
couples who choose parenthood. A vast body of families remain underresearched, but their
research indicates that, other things being equal daunting routes to parenthood seem likely to
(which they rarely are), two compatible parents select more for strengths than limitations.
provide advantages for children over single At the outset, we identified five parental vari-
parents. This appears to be true irrespective of ables routinely conflated by those who claim
parental gender, marital status, sexual identity, or that children need both a mother and a father in
biogenetic status. Most reviews of this research, order to thrivenumber, gender, sexual iden-
however, conflate the number of parents with tity, marital status, and biogenetic relationship
the other four variables (Amato, 2005; Glenn to children. To adequately assess the impact of
et al., 2002; Popenoe, 1996). Thus, to be true any one of these requires a research design that
to the best scientific evidence, one should say: matches or controls for the others. Current claims
Compared to all other family forms, families that children need both a mother and father are
headed by (at least) two committed, compatible spurious because they attribute to the gender of
parents are generally best for children. Whether parents benefits that correlate primarily with the
the participation of three or four parentsas in number and marital status of a childs parents
some cooperative stepfamilies, intergenerational since infancy. At this point no research supports
families, and coparenting alliances among the widely held conviction that the gender of
lesbians and gay menwould be better or worse parents matters for child well-being. To ascer-
has not yet been studied. tain whether any particular form of family is
In fact, based strictly on the published sci- ideal would demand sorting a formidable array
ence, one could argue that two women parent of often inextricable family and social variables.
better on average than a woman and a man, or We predict that even ideal research designs
at least than a woman and man with a traditional will find instead that ideal parenting comes in
division of family labor. Lesbian coparents seem many different genres and genders.
to outperform comparable married heterosexual,
biological parents on several measures, even
while being denied the substantial privileges of
marriage. This seems to be attributable partly to NOTE
selection effects and partly to women on aver- Authors are listed in alphabetical order. We are grateful
age exceeding men in parenting investment and for constructive comments from Henny Bos, Daniel
Carragher, Jason Cianciotto, Leslie Cooper, Gary Gates,
skills. Family structure modifies these differ- Jerry Jacobs, Jui-Chung Allen Li, Tey Meadow, Mignon
ences in parenting. Married heterosexual fathers Moore, Kelly Musick, Shannon Minter, Charlotte Patterson,
typically score lowest on parental involvement Michael Wald, and Larry Wu. We thank Ishwar Bridgelal,
and skills, but as with Dustin Hoffmans char- Casey Copen, Kara Lemma, and Sarah Lowe for
research assistance. This research was supported by
acter in the 1979 film Kramer v. Kramer, they a grant from the American Psychological Foundation
improve notably when faced with single or pri- and a USC Advancing Scholarship in the Humanities
mary parenthood. If parenting without women and Social Sciences award to Tim Biblarz and a
18 Journal of Marriage and Family

Russell Sage Foundation Visiting Scholar award and a planned lesbian families: A cross-cultural com-
New York University faculty research grant to Judith parison between the United States and the Nether-
Stacey. lands. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 78,
211 219.
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American Academy of Pediatrics. (2002). Coparent University of Amsterdam.
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Pediatrics, 109, 339 344. D. C. (2003). Planned lesbian families: Their
*Battle, J. (1998). How the boyz really made it out desire and motivation to have children. Human
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