No. 70-2, April 2021
Index
- A Multidimensional Perspective on Former Spouses' Ongoing Relationships: Associations With Children's Postdivorce Well‐Being
- Assessing Family Functioning: Psychometric Evaluation of the Family Star Plus
- Behavioral Observation and Analysis of Participants in Foster Care Visits
- Communication Mediators of the Link Between Depressive Symptoms and Relationship Satisfaction Among Army Soldiers
- Consequences of Divorce‐Based Father Absence During Childhood for Young Adult Well‐Being and Romantic Relationships
- Cumulative Risk and Substance Use in Adoptees: Moderation by Adoptive Parent Stress
- Issue Information
- Jealousy Links Comparisons with Siblings to Adjustment among Emerging Adults
- Korean Adoptees as Parents: Intergenerationality of Ethnic, Racial, and Adoption Socialization
- Lessons From the Field. Family Grief Care and Bibliotherapy: A Call for Models and Studies
- Lessons Learned From 11 Countries on Programs Promoting Intergenerational Solidarity
- Living Under the Shadows: Experiences of Latino Immigrant Families at Risk for Deportation
- Maternal Race‐Related Stressors and African American Adolescents' Academic and Behavioral Outcomes
- Parenting Among Rohingya and Afghan Refugee Parents Residing in Malaysia
- Parenting–Acculturation Match and Psychosocial Adjustment for Academically Gifted Chinese American Adolescents
- Psychological Abuse as a Mediator Between Insecure Attachment Orientations and Relationship Satisfaction
- Psychometric Properties of the Brief Accessibility, Responsiveness, and Engagement Scale in a Community Sample of Turkish Adults
- Secondary School Success in Times of Parental Divorce
- The Contribution of Empathy to the Adjustment of Military Veterans and Their Female Partners
- The Impact of Interparental Conflict on Children's Attention and Memory Performance
- Topic Avoidance as a Boundary Management Strategy in Communication With a Mother‐in‐Law
- “I feel like God doesn't like me”: Faith and Ambiguous Loss Among Transgender Youth
- “What If You Die?”: Skipped‐Generation Caregivers' Reported Conversations With Their Grandchildren About Death