Melissa A. Barnett,W. Roger Mills‐Koonce,Hanna Gustafsson,Martha J. Cox,Lynne Vernon‐Feagans,Clancy Blair,Peg Burchinal,Linda M. Burton,Keith A. Crnic,Ann C. Crouter,Patricia Garrett‐Peters,Mark T. Greenberg,Stephanie T. Lanza,Debra Skinner,Cynthia A. Stifter,Emily Werner,Michael T. Willoughby
Mutigenerational households that include grandmothers and adult mothers caring for grandchildren are increasingly common. The influence, however, of mother‐grandmother relationship quality and grandmothers' parenting on grandchildren's social development remains largely unexplored in these three‐generation households. This study examines linkages among caregiver depressive symptoms, mother‐grandmother verbal conflict, observed parenting, and 36‐month‐old grandchildren's problem and prosocial behaviors among a subsample from the Family Life Project ( N = 85) consisting of economically disadvantaged multigenerational families. The findings suggest that mother‐grandmother relationship conflict presents a risk to children's behavior directly and indirectly via mothers' negative parenting behaviors. Mothers seem to be more influenced by the mother‐grandmother relationship than grandmothers. These results highlight the importance of including mother‐grandmother conflict in mutigenerational families in family assessments and interventions.