Frank Furstenberg was born in Baltimore, Maryland, into an established Jewish family. His father, Frank Furstenberg, Sr., was a prominent physician and advocate for national health care[8] and his mother, Edith Hollander Furstenberg was a social worker and family matriarch.[9] His siblings include the late founding owner of Politics and Prose, Carla Furstenberg Cohen,[10][11] the master baker, Mark Furstenberg,[12][13] Michael Furstenberg, Anne Furstenberg and Ellen Furstenberg.
Furstenberg published important early work on the underlying components of teenage pregnancy in books, including:
Unplanned parenthood: The social consequences of teenage childbearing, 1976. The Free Press[2]
Teenage sexuality, pregnancy, and childbearing, edited with Richard Lincoln and Jane Menken, 1981. University of Pennsylvania Press[15]
Adolescent mothers in later life, with J. Brooks-Gunn and S. Philip Morgan. 1987. New York: Cambridge University Press[4]
Managing to make it: Urban families in high-risk neighborhoods, with Thomas Cook, Jacquelynne Eccles, Glen H. Elder Jr., and Arnold Sameroff. 1999. Chicago: University of Chicago Press[16]
On the frontiers of adulthood: Theory, research, and public policy, edited with Richard A. Settersten Jr. and Rubén G. Rumbaut. 2005. University of Chicago Press[17]
Destinies of the disadvantaged: The politics of teenage childbearing, 2007. Russell Sage Foundation[18]
In an opinion piece, Furstenberg explores the value of marriage and suggests that government policies should focus on creating economic and social conditions, such as child care subsidies, paid parental leaves, and cheaper health insurance, that will support marriage for low-income families.[19]
Furstenberg has also written extensively on divorce, remarriage and intergenerational relations in books including, The new American grandparent: A place in the family, a life apart, with Andrew J. Cherlin, 1986. Basic Books[3] and Divided families: What happens to children when parents part, with Andrew J. Cherlin, 1991. Harvard University Press.[20] He also writes about intergenerational issues, including the launch of college graduates in opinion pieces.[21]
As well, Furstenberg has written about the elements of an academic career in books and articles, such as Behind the academic curtain: How to find success and happiness with a Ph.D., 2013. University of Chicago Press,[22] reviewed in Inside Higher Ed,[23] and How I became a developmentalist, 2013. In The developmental science of adolescence: History through autobiography.[24]
Personal life
Furstenberg is married to Nina Segre. Together they have five children and six grandchildren and live in Philadelphia. His nephew, François Furstenberg, is a historian at Johns Hopkins University.[25]
^ abFurstenberg, Frank F. Jr. (1979). Unplanned parenthood : the social consequences of teenage childbearing. New York: Free Press. ISBN978-0-02-911030-0.
^ abFurstenberg, Frank F.; Brooks-Gunn, J.; Morgan, S. Philip (1990). Adolescent mothers in later life ([Repr.] ed.). Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-37968-7.
^Frank F. Furstenberg Jr. (2000). Managing to make it : urban families and adolescent success (Pbk. ed.). Chicago [u.a.]: University of Chicago Press. ISBN978-0-226-27393-8.
^Fingerman, Karen L.; Furstenberg, Frank F. (31 May 2012). "New York Times". New York Times. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
^Furstenberg, Frank F. (2013). Behind the academic curtain : how to find success and happiness with a PhD. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN978-0-226-06610-3.
^Petersen, Anne C.; Silbereisen, Rainer K.; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne (2014). Lerner, Richard M. (ed.). The developmental science of adolescence : history through autobiography (1. publ. ed.). Hove: Psychology Press Ltd. ISBN978-1-84872-931-5.