The Black family in the United States has been the subject of intense scrutiny and debate as public officials, advocates, researchers, and others grapple with the nation’s legacy of enslavement, economic exploitation, terror, and disenfranchisement of Black people. Research has played an important role in the country’s scrutiny of and debates about Black families. In fact, the formal study of Black families harkens back to the late 19th century and has close ties to the federal government and its policies, with some of the first writings commissioned by the American Council on Education and the Department of Labor.1,2
This continued focus on Black families over time reflects the unique importance of families for the well-being of children and society.3 The family’s value is connected to its many roles and functions, which include the provision of love, safety, identity development, socialization, economic support, and education.4,5,6 However, public attitudes and beliefs about families can vary based on families’ demographics (e.g., race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status), structures (e.g., nuclear, single parent, extended), and other characteristics. These views, in turn, affect how family policies, programs, and practices are conceptualized, funded, designed, implemented, and evaluated, and how well or poorly families fare under these policies.7
Research on Black families—as with all social science research—mirrors our nation’s beliefs and priorities but is also capable of exerting its own influence on public attitudes and policies. Over time, this research has influenced how Black families are framed in policy discourse (e.g., resilient, intact, fragile, broken) and which policies and practices have been enacted—or have failed to be enacted—to support them.8,9 Understanding this interplay, and how it has shifted over the decades, can inform investments in new research priorities and approaches needed to create policy environments that are supportive of Black families’ health, wealth, self-determination, and flourishing.
The last 100 years represent a sea change in how Black families live their day-to-day lives; in the policy environments Black families must navigate; and, necessarily, in how researchers study Black families. The period from 1920 to 2019 includes key historical events affecting Black families—including the Great Migration beginning in 1910, the Great Depression that extended through the 1930s, the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s, the intensification of the “War on Drugs” and mass incarceration that disproportionately impacted Black youth and men in the 1980s and 1990s, the election of former President Barack Obama and the first Black family to occupy the White House in 2008, and the growth of the Black Lives Matter movement that began in 2013 and ushered in a new era of Black-led activism for social justice.
We have undertaken a review of social science research focused on Black families that spans this historical period, from 1920 to 2019. Our review describes key scholars, the funders of research on Black families and the goals of the research, and the methods and approaches used to conduct it. We have organized the review into two volumes. Volume I covers the period from 1920 to 1969 and Volume II covers 1970 to 2019. Across each volume, we take care to situate our review of past research in that era’s social, political, and economic context. As such, our review of research on Black families reaches into the past to glean lessons for the future.
A key goal of our review is to inform the development of an applied research agenda focused on Black families with children that is appropriate for the 21st century.10 This agenda aims to produce evidence for policymakers, practitioners, and the public that can be used to advance Black families’ well-being. Our review also illustrates how such research—and its connection to and implications for public policy—has evolved over time. In doing so, we have identified specific lessons for researchers, research funders, and policymakers to strengthen ties between research and policy on behalf of Black families.
Black Families in the United States
We define “Black families” as a group of at least one self-identified Black adult related by birth, marriage, adoption, or choice to one or more children (infancy through adolescence).
When referencing Black people, we are referring to individuals who may identify as African American—those who were primarily born in the United States and are descended from enslaved Africans who survived the trans-Atlantic slave trade—as well as the smaller populations of people living in the United States who may identify as Black African or Afro-Caribbean.
Black also includes individuals who reported being Black alone or in combination with one or more races or ethnicities in their responses to the U.S. Census—for instance, an individual who identifies as Black only, as well as someone who identifies as Black and White combined or Afro-Latino.
Our review offers key insights into how research, policy, and practice can promote the well-being of Black families. Here, we provide a summary of these findings, which are described in greater detail in each of the two volumes.
The 1920s were a period of multiple transitions in the country, including the end of World War I and the beginning of the Great Migration, in which significant numbers of Black Americans from the South moved primarily to Western, Midwestern, and Northern cities in search of a reprieve from racism and racial violence, better employment opportunities, and a more financially stable life. The United States experienced considerable economic growth and prosperity overall but the stock market crashed by the end of the 1920s; this development negatively affected all Americans but had a particularly devastating economic impact on Black families.
1920s Census data show that the vast majority (85.2%) of Negroes (note: this text uses the terms used by the Census for each respective decade) still lived in the Southeastern states of the continental United States. However, the 1920s also marked a time of migration for Black families in the South, with a more than 40 percent (43.3%) increase in the number of Negroes moving to the Northern United States.
Research on Black families in the 1920s was often conducted by Black scholars (many of them men) who worked at Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Research drew heavily on the fields of sociology and social work and chronicled differences and changes in Black families as they moved from the South to the North; much research also explored Black families’ structures, expenditures, and economic situations.
Much of the research conducted during the 1920s laid the groundwork for current social policy and practices such as the calculation of the federal poverty line.
Economic support, financial assistance, and labor protection programs developed via expanded federal government policy—such as New Deal legislation and the 1935 Social Security Act—lessened the impact of the Great Depression on American citizens. Black American families, however, did not often benefit from such programs—a result of racist implementation and compromises made to appease Southern states and their desires to continue to oppress Black people and exploit their labor.
While economic hardship (in large part resulting from the Depression) plagued American citizens in the 1930s, overall employment rates for Negro men and women in the United States were relatively high (59.2%), especially considering the challenging circumstances. Black men (80.2%) outnumbered women (38.9%) in rates of “gainful employment.”
Research focused on Black families in the 1930s continued to explore the effects on Black families of migration from the rural South to Northern cities (and elsewhere). Explorations of intra-racial class and caste differences were documented, including descriptions of Black family life and Black family functioning in different geographic locations, environments, and class strata. This research, however, had a mixed influence on federal policy due to the era’s prevalence of racist and patriarchal ideologies.
While Black scholars were instrumental in documenting variation among Black families, including how systemic racism disadvantaged these families, their work had a limited impact on federal policy.
The 1940s saw increased prosperity and stability for Americans via economic gains brought about in part by World War II (WWII), the 1944 G.I. Bill, and other policies. Black Americans continued to relocate from the South and into Northern, Midwestern, and Western cities for industrial and factory work; this resulted in racial tensions between Black and White Americans in various facets of life, including employment, housing, and social spaces. Research at the federal level investigated these issues, along with racism and discrimination embedded in family policies. Gradual shifts in policy began to occur: For instance, in 1948, the California Supreme Court overturned the state’s ban on interracial marriage.
Almost two thirds (65.6%) of Negro men and just under one third (32.2%) of Negro women were engaged in employment in the 1940s. Still, one in 10 Negro men (10.8%) and women (11.3%) were unemployed and seeking work. Many “nonwhite” women (41.5%) not engaged in employment or looking for work were engaged in unpaid housework in their own home. For women working outside of the home, the number of “Nonwhite” women working in professional, technical, and kindred services began to grow.
The 1940s brought about a bevy of research designed to understand the ways in which issues such as income, class, and geography—along with access to education and other organizations and supports—affected the evolution and functioning of Black families, including children and youth. Research strategies included quantitative and qualitative methods such as longitudinal ethnographic observations, interviews, review and analysis of statistical and historical data, reviews of historical documents, and development of family history diagrams. Research methods also began to include a more intentional focus on examining family structures and outcomes for children and youth.
Research in the 1940s was often federally funded in collaboration with state and local governments and entities and focused on understanding social problems relevant to Black families.
Families grew quickly during the 1950s, in part because of the return of soldiers from World War II. This period, referred to as the Baby Boom, shifted the composition of labor market geography along gender and racial lines. A dual occurrence—whereby White (non-immigrant) families lived in the suburbs with a breadwinner husband and stay-at-home wife/mother and Black men and women lived in cities working and raising children—became the norm. A subset of more prosperous Black families in Northern and other locations, however, did move to the suburbs and purchased homes despite exclusionary and racist policies that aimed to keep them out.
The 1950s marked the beginning of a Baby Boom across the country, ending a century of declining fertility rates. The birth rate for Black women and women of “other races” increased to 137.3 births for every 1,000 women ages 15 to 44—higher than the national average of 106.2 births for every 1,000 women ages 15 to 44.
Juvenile delinquency was a topic of increasing interest, including the desire to understand the origins of juvenile delinquency vis a vis the family, and whether delinquency was malleable. Research also explored key variables such as the role of socializing influences on children and youth, including men, residential mobility, class, family structure, family traditions, and family relationships.
Much 1950s research focused on Black families examined family as a protective factor for children and youth, as well as families’ relationships to social institutions, transmission of values, and level of access to opportunities.
Federal policies were enacted to support efforts to address poverty and racial injustices in the United States. These programs and initiatives facilitated access to opportunities and resources such as education, training, and work for poor people, Black people, and other people who were marginalized in the country. Although the federal government’s increasing role in using policy to address civil rights did not ameliorate the impact of racism, discrimination, and poverty, it did play a critical role in changing the status quo and bolstering opportunities for Black people and families.
Despite progress in the 1960s, the poverty rate for Black families with children under age 18 was over twice the national average (48.8% versus 18.3%). However, despite high rates of poverty, in 1960, the majority (63.8%) of Black men and men of “other races” were employed, as were over one third (38.1%) of Black women and women of “other races.”
Much of the research in the 1960s grappled with the uneven progress (spurred by civil rights legislation) being made by Black people and families. Family formation and planning, explorations of families occupying lower socioeconomic strata, fathers, matriarchy, interracial relationships and marriage, and birth and family functioning were all flourishing areas of Black family-focused research during the decade. Additionally, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s controversial, federally sponsored research report—The Negro Family: The Case for National Action—sparked considerable debate regarding our nation’s understanding of Black families.
The controversial Moynihan report raised issues about the “pathology” of Black families that still have an outsized influence in research and policy circles today.
Civil rights legislation in the 1960s and 1970s opened doors for a rising Black middle class in politics, education, and business. However, progress stalled in the late 1970s as affirmative action policies were rolled back amid cries of reverse discrimination.
By 1970, 53.0 percent of Black people in the United States were living in the South and the vast majority (81.0%) were living in urban areas.
Many of the studies on Black families in the 1970s critiqued the theoretical approach and methodological rigor of Moynihan’s The Negro Family: The Case for National Action—instead providing comprehensive and in-depth analyses of Black families’ history, strengths, needs, challenges, and unique dynamics.
The scholarship, policies, and ideological shifts that occurred during this watershed decade indelibly shaped research and discourse on Black families for decades to come.
The 1980s was characterized by tax cuts to stimulate the economy (also known as trickle-down theory), expanded military spending, reduced expenditures on social programs, and an intensified spotlight on drug policy resulting in the mass incarceration of primarily Black men in low-income communities.
In 1980, the poverty rate for Black families with children under age 18 was more than double the national rate, at 42.1 percent. Unemployment was also high, with more than one in ten (11.8%) Black Americans reporting unemployment in 1980.
Several studies in the 1980s focused on documenting and explaining the rise and impact of households headed by single Black mothers and the impact of high Black male unemployment and low wages for Black women on the viability of Black two-parent households.
Research on Black families in the 1980s both challenged and promoted the decade’s increased focus on traditional values, personal responsibility, and limited government.
By the end of the 1990s, the country experienced low unemployment and inflation, a budget surplus, and the highest home ownership rates in U.S. history. However, from 1990 to 1999, the country also experienced a 75 percent increase in the number of sentenced inmates in federal and state prisons; in 1999, 43 percent of these inmates were Black men.
In 1990, the fertility rate among Black women was comparable to the previous decade (86.8 births per 1,000 women ages 15-44) but declined throughout the 1990s (to 68.5 births per 1,000 women ages 15-44 in 1999).
Several studies in the 1990s examined the role and saliency of Black fathers—along with kin and social networks—as buffers against the effects of racism, generally, and against social and economic conditions specific to the 1980s and 1990s.
Research on Black families in the 1990s attempted to uncover sources of racial resilience in the face of increasing economic inequality.
In September 2001, the United States experienced the deadliest foreign attacks on its soil since Pearl Harbor, sparking a protracted “war on terror.” Over the course of the 2000s, nearly 2 million U.S. military personnel were deployed in 3 million tours of duty–a disproportionate percentage of whom were Black men and women.
Studies on Black families in the 2000s largely focused on the impact of mass incarceration on Black families; the role of families in addressing health concerns (e.g., diabetes, hypertension, depression, and HIV/AIDS) in the Black community; issues of gender and sexuality; and the relationship between Black families, schools, and student success.
Research on Black families in the 2000s increasingly used intersectional frameworks and qualitative methods to document and analyze their diverse conditions.
Barack Obama’s election as the first U.S. president of African descent marked a national racial milestone, fueling debates about a “post-racial” America; however, perceptions of growing racial inequality and violence sparked a new era of Black-led activism.
In 2010, there were 303,965,272 people living in the United States, of whom 40,633,114 (13.4%) identified as Black or African American alone or in combination with one or more other races. Of the U.S. Black population in 2010, nearly one in ten (8.8%) were born outside of the country.
Studies on Black families in the 2010s expanded their focus to include Black immigrant families, Black LGBTQ+ parents, and Black biracial families and children.
Research in the 2010s helped broaden the nation’s discourse on race and Black family and child well-being in the face of continued racial inequity.
To build social systems and policies that are supportive of the heterogeneity of 21st-century Black families, a 21st-century applied research agenda is needed. Our review of past research suggests three priorities for such an agenda: (1) elevating the voices of Black communities in research and policy discourse, (2) documenting the demographics and diversity of Black families, and (3) reframing research questions to focus on sources of both systemic risk and community protection.
Achieving these priorities requires research that shifts away from the presumption of deficits within Black families toward approaches that shift how research questions are asked, centers Black family and community strengths, identifies and attends to deficits and racism within U.S. systems, and redefines how research and research-to-policy translation occurs. A research agenda that encompasses these priorities will help the nation better understand how, why, and under what conditions organizational and systemic changes can support and strengthen Black families, including potential variations based on family attributes such as structure, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, geographic background, and/or other demographic and social characteristics.
Build stronger networks to connect policy and practice audiences with Black scholars. Black scholars have long been the architects of research on Black families, but policy audiences have often overlooked their work when considering issues of major significance to Black families and their children. Research funders should ensure that Black scholars have the long-term funding necessary to develop, conduct, and disseminate their research, and to build networks to effectively engage advocates, public officials, and practitioners. Public officials, advocates, think tanks, and members of the media should take care to include Black scholars when engaging research communities in public discourse and initiatives to reform policies, programs, and practices.
Support research methods and approaches that center the voices and priorities of Black families and communities and engage them as research partners. In past and current research, Black families have often been the subject of research while having limited say in its focus and execution. As a result, studies have often defaulted to deficit framing of Black families, perpetuating harmful stereotypes and ineffective policies and practices. Collaborative research approaches (e.g., participatory research, action research) offer promising ways to address this challenge by engaging families and communities as partners in the development and dissemination of research. However, participatory research is typically more expensive and time-consuming to implement than quantitative approaches such as secondary data analyses. Funding and grantmaking organizations can build on and expand past research by allocating time and resources toward research that values the expertise and experiences that reside in Black families and communities, and among Black scholars.
Support data collection and research methods that show the diversity of Black families, including their family structures, socioeconomic conditions, nations of origin, disabilities, sexual orientations, and gender identities. If family characteristics are invisible in the data, they are likely invisible in policy discourse. Data collection that supports analyses of Black families and their unique characteristics is important for showing areas of progress, as well as the persistent effects of systemic racism that demand continued attention from researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and society at large.
Invest in creating and supplementing large-scale datasets focused on Black families and research that identifies, acknowledges, and investigates Black families’ social and cultural assets. Large-scale datasets are an important resource for understanding the status of people living in the United States, as well as shifts over time. The U.S. Census—a significant source of data on families in the country—reflects longstanding biases and racism that limit its capacity to shed light on the complexity of Black families. Moreover, variables in the Census (and other datasets) often do not include indicators of strengths or assets that are relevant to Black families and their importance in facilitating positive outcomes for adults and children.[13] Large-scale national and local datasets that include such indicators are critical for producing knowledge that can promote equity in Black families’ experiences and outcomes. Furthermore, while the strengths and assets of Black families have been a focus of research since the 1920s, and began to burgeon in the 1960s and 1970s, there is limited understanding today of how Black family and community assets—such as flexible family roles, strong kinship ties, and the Black church14—are changing as Black families respond to shifts in societal norms and demands. Policymakers and social service administrators need direction on how to leverage and strengthen Black family assets—along with an understanding of practices that harm Black families—as they develop and adjust policies and programs that affect them.
Continue to encourage research questions that probe systems, policies, and practices for sources of harm and exclusion for Black families. Limited attention to the institutions and systems that produce social challenges has fueled deficit narratives about Black adults, youth, and children. Further, research about the influence of systems, policies, and practices can provide advocates and public officials with clear and actionable options to generate reforms that better support Black families. Such research should include critical analyses of early care, education, juvenile and criminal justice, child welfare, and health and social services systems.
Invest in research that examines community-level conditions—including the local and state contexts that shape them—and their implications for Black families. Cities and states are often incubators for national change, leading the nation in penal reform, family leave, early care and education, guaranteed income programs, and universal health care—policies that have had significant consequences for families generally and for Black families specifically. Cities and states have also enacted exclusionary policies harmful to Black families. Studies that examine Black families and communities within and across specific geographic locations and policy contexts can highlight conditions that facilitate or diminish their flourishing. These types of investigations also have the potential of moving the United States closer to a racially just and equitable society in which all families can thrive.
This 100-year review of studies on Black families informs an ongoing research agenda at Child Trends focused on Black children and families. In addition to informing our work, we are excited to contribute to the field more generally, and hope this review and learnings are helpful to others interested in transforming the ways in which research focused on Black families is undertaken and used to support the flourishing of Black families in the United States.
1. Grossman, J. (1974). Black studies in the Department of Labor, 1897-1907. Monthly Labor Review, 97(6), 17–27. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41839356
2. Allen, W. R. (1978). Black Family Research in the United States: A Review, Assessment and Extension. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 9(2), 167–189. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41601045
3. Hass, L., & Wisensale, S. K. (Eds.). (2006). Families and social policy: National and international perspectives. The Haworth Press, Inc.
4. Masten, A. S., & Shaffer, A. (2006). How Families Matter in Child Development: Reflections from Research on Risk and Resilience. In A. Clarke-Stewart & J. Dunn (Eds.), Families count: Effects on child and adolescent development (pp. 5–25). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511616259.002
5. Masten, A. S. (2018). Resilience theory and research on children and families: Past, present, and promise. Journal of Family Theory & Review, 10(1), 12-31.
6. Gadsden, V. L. & Hall, M. (1996). Intergenerational learning: A review of the literature. University of Pennsylvania.
7. Schneider, A. L., & Ingram, H. M. (Eds.). (2005). Deserving and entitled: Social constructions and public policy. Suny Press.
8. Abramovitz, M. (2006). Welfare reform in the United States: Gender, race and class matter. Critical Social Policy, 26(2), 336-364.
9. Zinn, M. B. (1989). Family, race, and poverty in the eighties. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 14(4), 856-874.
10. Sanders, M., Lloyd, C., & Shaw, S. (2022). An applied research agenda on Black children and families to advance practices and policies that promote their well-being. Child Trends. https://www.childtrends.org/publications/an-applied-research-agenda-on-black-children-and-families-to-advance-practices-and-policies-that-promote-their-well-being.
11. Shapin S. (2022). Hard science, soft science: A political history of a disciplinary array. History of Science. 60(3):287-328. doi: 10.1177/00732753221094739.
12. Druckman, D., & Donohue, W. (2020). Innovations in social science methodologies: an overview. American Behavioral Scientist, 64(1), 3-18. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0002764219859623
13. Lloyd, C.M., Boddicker-Young, P. & Schaefer, C. (2021). Applying indicators and theory to the delivery of early care and education supports for Black families with infants and toddlers. Child Trends.
14. Lloyd, C.M., Shaw, S., Sanders, M., Abdul-Masih, M. & Schaefer, C. (2022). Reimagining Black family cultural assets for the 21st century. Child Trends. https://www.childtrends.org/publications/reimagining-black-families-cultural-assets-can-inform-policies-and-practices-that-enhance-their-well-being
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