Abstract
This study investigated the relationship between post-divorce interparental conflict and children's behavioral adjustment as influenced by mother-child relationship, children's contact with both parents, as well as children's self-report of their emotional experiences and emotional regulation strategies. Findings indicated intriguing pathways through which post-divorce interparental conflict predicted children's behavioral adjustment. Post-divorce interparental conflict, as reported by the mothers, directly predicted increased behavior problems in children; this phenomenon, however, was also mediated by children's continued contact with both parents, children's self-reported emotion of anger and the use of support-seeking from parents. Implications of such Findings were discussed.
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