About this Research Topic
Considering the complexity and diversity of contemporary families, the goal of this Research topic is to provide a broad and comprehensive perspective on parenting, adopting an inclusive and interdisciplinary framework.
Firstly, this collection aimed at extending the knowledge of what processes underlie caregiving attitudes and behaviors in different family structures and contexts (e.g., single parents, same-sex and different-sex families, and adoptive families foster care). Interdisciplinary theoretical contributions and multi-method empirical findings on clinical and non-clinical samples will help in understanding the predictors, correlates, and outcomes of parenting. Broadening the scope of determinants of parenting may inform preventive strategies, assessments, and effective interventions to address families and children's needs in diverse contexts. Moreover, this Research Topic may serve to stimulate the debate about parental contribution to child development, parent-child relationship, and family processes, in a great variety of family contexts and circumstances.
We welcome quantitative (e.g. original research, brief report), qualitative research,
systematic review and metanalysis, methods and study protocol, opinion, perspective as well as policy and practice review focused on the following topics:
- determinants of parenting
- neurobiology of parenting
- parental involvement in childcare
- parenting quality and child outcomes
- parenthood and socio-cultural influence
- co-parenting
- alloparenting
- parent-child attachment
- family processes
- parenting assessment and interventions
Keywords: Parenting, Child development, Fathering, Mothers, Single Parenting, Same-sex Parenting, Family forms, Parental Brain, Neurobiology, Attachment, Co-parenting, Parent-child relationship, Parental Involvement, Childcare, Assessment, Prevention, Interventions
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.