The Origins of Happiness

(Elliott) #1

13 Family Conflict


It’s just a family that loves each other, and as long as
they do that’s a happy family.

— Eight- year- old girl

By the time they were 16, one- fifth of the 1970 birth cohort


had experienced the break- up of their family: their parents no


longer lived together.^1 Since then family break- up has become


even more common, and today 40% of British 16- year- olds live


in separated families.^2 In the United States the figure is 50%.


Break- up on this scale is a relatively modern phenomenon


— one of the more important changes over the last forty


years. So what is it doing to our children? ALSPAC provides


good evidence, and the broad answer is this: What matters


is family conflict, rather than family break- up, and, if the


conflict is bad enough, the break- up may help the children.


But the conflict is unambiguously bad, especially for the be-


havior of the children— parents who fight tend to generate


children who fight.


Measurement


To measure whether there is family conflict the mothers


in ALSPAC were regularly asked: In the past three months


have you or your partner



  • argued with each other over 3 times

  • been irritable with the other

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