Journal of Family Issues

Papers
(The H4-Index of Journal of Family Issues is 15. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-07-01 to 2025-07-01.)
ArticleCitations
Beyond the Economic-Need Hypothesis: A Life-Course Explanation of Women’s Extended Family Living Arrangements in Chile40
Parenting Immigrants: Understanding How Family Relationships Impact the Wellbeing of Older Chinese Immigrants Living on the Gold Coast, Australia38
Is it an Impossible Task? Exploring the Lived Experiences of Christian Parents With Young Children in the UK30
The Cost of “A Better Life”: Children Left Behind—Beyond Ambiguous Loss28
The Remarriage Belief Inventory: A Validation Study in the Remarried Portuguese Population23
The Role of Adverse Childhood Experiences in the Trajectories to Adulthood of Chinese Youth: A Retrospective Study20
Experiences of Autonomy in Marriage and Divorce Within the Chinese Traditional System18
Weathering the Storm: Longitudinal Evidence on Women’s Changing Family Relationships During COVID-1918
Chinese Lesbian and Gay Adults’ Self-Reported Experiences of Negative Treatment and Violence From Family of Origin: Evidence From a Larger-Scale Study in China17
Attitudes Toward Heterosexual and Lesbian Stepmothers: An Experimental Test in the Italian Context17
Feminist Mothering and Primary Prevention of Gendered Violence: Insights From Australian Mothers Raising Sons17
Mental Health Across the Life Course for Men and Women in Married, Cohabiting, and Living Apart Together Relationships16
Parental Recollections of Bullying15
The Impact of Physical Health, Race, and Financial Status on Relational Satisfaction15
Grandparenting and Well-Being of the Elderly in China15
Advice for New Stepparents From the Perspective of Stepchildren Who Experienced Stepfamily Formation During Adolescence15
Parents’ Perceptions of Children’s Behavioral Difficulties and the Parent–Child Interaction During the COVID-19 Lockdown15
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