Do Children Need Both A Mother And A Father?

Posted by on Jan 26, 2010 | 4 Comments

There should be an image here!The presumption that children need both a mother and a father is widespread. It has been used by proponents of Proposition 8 to argue against same-sex marriage and to uphold a ban on same-sex adoption.

On the other end of the political spectrum, Barack Obama endorsed the vital role of fathers in a 2008 speech: “Of all the rocks upon which we build our lives, we are reminded today that family is the most important. And we are called to recognize and honor how critical every father is to that foundation.”

The lead article in the February issue of Journal of Marriage and Family challenges the idea that “fatherless” children are necessarily at a disadvantage or that men provide a different, indispensable set of parenting skills than women.

“Significant policy decisions have been swayed by the misconception across party lines that children need both a mother and a father. Yet, there is almost no social science research to support this claim. One problem is that proponents of this view routinely ignore research on same-gender parents,” said sociologist Timothy Biblarz of the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

Extending their prior work on gender and family, Biblarz and Judith Stacey of NYU analyzed relevant studies about parenting, including available research on single-mother and single-father households, gay male parents and lesbian parents. “That a child needs a male parent and a female parent is so taken for granted that people are uncritical,” Stacey said.

In their analysis, the researchers found no evidence of gender-based parenting abilities, with the “partial exception of lactation,” noting that very little about the gender of the parent has significance for children’s psychological adjustment and social success.

As the researchers write: “The social science research that is routinely cited does not actually speak to the questions of whether or not children need both a mother and a father at home. Instead proponents generally cite research that compares [heterosexual two-parent] families with single parents, thus conflating the number with the gender of parents.”

Indeed, there are far more similarities than differences among children of lesbian and heterosexual parents, according to the study. On average, two mothers tended to play with their children more, were less likely to use physical discipline, and were less likely to raise children with chauvinistic attitudes. Studies of gay male families are still limited.

However, like two heterosexual parents, new parenthood among lesbians increased stress and conflict, exacerbated by general lack of legal recognition of commitment. Also, lesbian biological mothers typically assumed greater caregiving responsibility than their partners, reflecting inequities among heterosexual couples.

“The bottom line is that the science shows that children raised by two same-gender parents do as well on average as children raised by two different-gender parents. This is obviously inconsistent with the widespread claim that children must be raised by a mother and a father to do well,” Biblarz said.

Stacey concluded: “The family type that is best for children is one that has responsible, committed, stable parenting. Two parents are, on average, better than one, but one really good parent is better than two not-so-good ones. The gender of parents only matters in ways that don’t matter.”

Bethany H. Carland-Adams @ Wiley-Blackwell

[Photo above by greencolander / CC BY-ND 2.0]

[awsbullet:same sex parenting]

  • D

    Even though both of my parents lived together in the home till I was in my late 30′s due to divorce…never knew my father since he never got an education (GED in his late 20′s). He ended up working till the job gave him a stroke & changed his personality for the worse. I believe it possible that my only marriage ended in divorce from me doing trying to do the same thing…since that was the only example I ever knew.

    Having gotten “fixed” over 10 years ago…I have seen how my life has gone & was happy I never had to deal with this situation with children I may have had had my life gone differently. Thinking homosexuality is a bad decision…if I would’ve had 2 parents of either sex around…my life would’ve turned out MUCH different.

  • pctyson

    Another “scientific” study. I love it when statements such as the following are thrown out as rhetorically relevant:

    “exacerbated by general lack of legal recognition of commitment”

    Exactly how did they measure the “lack of legal recognition” as it relates to stress? Did they measure study participants in states that permit homosexual marriage versus participants in states that do not recognize these “unions”? There are so many variables in how this would need to be measured that to even make this statement clearly shows errors in the methodology used to derive the conclusions contained in the article.
    “Legal recognition of commitment”? Hollywood and society has virtually nullified any meaning that the word commitment once held!

  • Michael Saxton

    Interesting that the apparent mis-representation used by proponents is cited but this article skips the very same type of misrepresentation when used to support same sex parenting.

    The article says that “Studies of gay male families are still limited.” but still seems to equate studies in only gay female familes as sufficient to leap to the conclusion that ALL same sex marriages are the same.

    Next, in order to support the alleged evidence for no differences, the researchers labeled these differences as bad by using words like “chauvinistic attitudes” or “less likely to use physical discipline”. Therefore any noted differences must be because these difference are undesirable.

    I would suggest that the research this atricle is based on is just as if not more heavily biased.

  • Allan Thompson

    Bogus ‘research’ in an attempt to justify the views of the ‘researcher’.
    I see no statistical evidence to support the case. The vast majority of families (humans and animals) consist of male and female parents (duh!) and the raising of children by same sex couples is extremely small in number and hardly statistically significant how can such a conclusion be drawn?
    It would be interesting to learn what the percentage population of gay people is. – and the ratio of same sex partnerships to heterosexual partnerships.