Family Planning and Concerns of Unfair Treatment of (Potential) Children Among Partnered Sexual and Gender Minority Individuals.

IF 1.4 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Kristen E Gustafson, Wendy D Manning, Claire M Kamp Dush
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Abstract

People with sexual minority (SM) identities are less likely to aspire to be parents than their heterosexual counterparts. This differential may be due to concerns by SM people about their child(ren) encountering prejudice or discrimination. The objective of this study is to empirically examine whether SM respondents' rationales for not having children are due to concerns that their child(ren) will be treated unfairly. We draw on the National Couples' Health and Time Study (NCHAT), a nationally representative study of partnered adults conducted between September 2020 and April 2021. The NCHAT includes oversamples of sexual and gender minority people. We include SM respondents under 50 and are not currently intending to have a child (n=1,079). About half reported that they were avoiding having a child due to concerns about how their child(ren) would be treated because of their own sexual or gender identity. SM people in same-gender couples had significantly higher odds of being concerned about their potential child's treatment than those in different-gender couples, and these results persisted with the inclusion of sociodemographic indicators. This study is one of the first to quantitatively examine mistreatment as a potential barrier to family building among sexual and gender diverse individuals.

计划生育和对性伴侣和性别少数群体(潜在)子女不公平待遇的关注。
与异性恋者相比,性少数群体(SM)不太可能渴望成为父母。这种差异可能是由于SM的人担心他们的孩子会遇到偏见或歧视。本研究的目的是实证检验SM受访者不生孩子的理由是否是由于担心他们的孩子(ren)会受到不公平对待。我们借鉴了全国夫妻健康和时间研究(NCHAT),这是一项在2020年9月至2021年4月期间对有伴侣的成年人进行的全国代表性研究。NCHAT包括性和性别少数群体的超额样本。我们包括50岁以下的SM受访者,目前不打算生孩子(n=1,079)。大约一半的人表示,由于担心自己的孩子会因为自己的性取向或性别认同而受到怎样的对待,他们避免生孩子。同性伴侣中的SM者比异性伴侣中的SM者更关心他们潜在孩子的治疗,这些结果在纳入社会人口统计指标后仍然存在。这项研究是第一个定量研究虐待作为性别和性别不同的个体之间建立家庭的潜在障碍的研究之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.40
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0.00%
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