The Two-Parent Privelege

How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind

Melissa S. Kearney

Recommended By

Book Synopsis

"The Two-Parent Privilege" by Melissa S. Kearney offers a provocative analysis of the societal advantages bestowed upon two-parent households. Drawing on extensive research and compelling evidence, Kearney explores how growing up in a stable two-parent family can create a multitude of benefits for children, including higher educational attainment, better health outcomes, and increased financial security.

Delving into the implications of this privilege, Kearney examines the ways in which it perpetuates inequality and limits opportunities for children raised in single-parent households. She uncovers the systematic disadvantages faced by these families, such as limited access to affordable childcare, lower social capital, and increased economic insecurity.

Through a combination of rigorous statistical analysis and thought-provoking anecdotes, Kearney invites readers to confront the far-reaching consequences of the two-parent privilege for both individuals and society as a whole. She challenges commonly held beliefs about personal responsibility and highlights the role of policy interventions that can help level the playing field for all children, regardless of their family structure.

"The Two-Parent Privilege" serves as essential reading for policymakers, scholars, and anyone interested in understanding the complex dynamics of family structure and its impact on social inequality. With a clear and concise writing style, Kearney presents a compelling case for reexamining our assumptions about family and advocating for policies that promote equity and opportunity for all.

Explore More Books

See All
Euclid's Elements
The Captive Mind
Fables
Flowers for Algernon
For The Love Of Physics
The Humane Economy
Memoirs
The Great Influenza
Think Like
History of the World
The Story of Civilization: Rousseau and Revolution
The Social Animal
The Worlds I See
Mission
The Dream of Reason
Children of Dune
Lateral Thinking
The World is Flat
A Bright Future
Jack
Predictably Irrational
The Art of Spirited Away
What You Do Is Who You Are
Maverick
Letters to a Young Scientist
You
Bitcoin is Venice
Being Aware of Being Aware
The Bitcoin Standard
In Praise of Slowness
Decrypting Money
Economics in One Lesson
Money Changes Everything
Decoded
The Dream Machine
Why Minsky Matters
Everything All At Once
Gay Like Me
Benjamin Franklin
Why Information Grows
The Sympathizer
Home Work
Dance to the Tune of Life
Go To
The Water Dancer
The Myth of the Strong Leader
Where Good Ideas Come From
Social Cognition
One Monster After Another
Benjamin Franklin
The Spy and The Traitor
Gang Leader for a Day
Grit
Take Back The Game
Who Am I
Shortcut
Letters of Note
Albert Einstein
The Psychology of Money
The Quest for El Cid
This Explains Everything
Speak Like Churchill, Stand Like Lincoln
Nine Pints
Anything You Want
Bitcoin
Lucky Me
The Great Mental Models
Unstoppable Prosperity
A New History of Greek Mathematics
Reinventing American Health Care
Collected Fictions
The Book of Five Rings
Life Ascending
Who Is Michael Ovitz
On Intelligence
An Agricultural Testament
Letters To A Young Athlete
The End of History and the Last Man
Secrets of Power Negotiating
Little Brother
Changing Minds
Well
How to Get Lucky
Days of Rage
What Works on Wall Street
A Timeless Way of Building
Fall of Constantinople
Sit Like a Buddha
The New Jim Crow
A Universe From Nothing
New Power
Holistic Management
Born to Run
Devil's Harbor
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
The War of Art
Replay
Radical Uncertainty
How To Buy Stocks
On Grief and Grieving