In this Commentary, Baker highlights two important issues raised by Roberts\u27s article. First, she shows that the structure of state support for caretaking affects caretaking norms. If women, and particularly women of color, want to take advantage of the benefits of more collective caretaking arrangements like kinship networks, the state support should not be limited to individual women who choose to caretake in isolated, non-communal settings. Second, she suggests that in order to maximize the benefits of kinship arrangements, it is important to articulate a theory of state deference to family that does not rely on traditional notions of financial independence or parental rights
Contemporary social policy relating to women\u27s employment remains strikingly ambivalent. Those in...
This thesis seeks to address how kinship care can produce higher permanency outcomes for children. B...
An increasing number of children are being cared for exclusively by grandparents or extended family....
In this Commentary, Baker highlights two important issues raised by Roberts\u27s article. First, she...
The law of custody and visitation is expanding to include the possibility of non-biological and non-...
Kinship foster care replaces a traditional, private African American family arrangement with a simil...
This paper examines how U.S. child support policy validates traditional divisions of labor and there...
This article presents themes from a qualitative study of 58 African American female kinship caregive...
In her provocative article The Networked Family: Reframing the Legal Understanding of Caregiving and...
Families of all shapes and sizes are struggling to meet work and caregiving responsibilities. While ...
Recent custody decisions in the United States have treated paid in-home caretakers as substitutes fo...
This Commentary remarks on the work of Fineman and Williams, particularly their contributions to thi...
Ertman responds to McClain\u27s suggestion that we should alter our understandings of care for child...
I begin this Article with the preceding two statements concerning care for children because they foc...
The problem of combining work and family life is perhaps the central challenge for the contemporary ...
Contemporary social policy relating to women\u27s employment remains strikingly ambivalent. Those in...
This thesis seeks to address how kinship care can produce higher permanency outcomes for children. B...
An increasing number of children are being cared for exclusively by grandparents or extended family....
In this Commentary, Baker highlights two important issues raised by Roberts\u27s article. First, she...
The law of custody and visitation is expanding to include the possibility of non-biological and non-...
Kinship foster care replaces a traditional, private African American family arrangement with a simil...
This paper examines how U.S. child support policy validates traditional divisions of labor and there...
This article presents themes from a qualitative study of 58 African American female kinship caregive...
In her provocative article The Networked Family: Reframing the Legal Understanding of Caregiving and...
Families of all shapes and sizes are struggling to meet work and caregiving responsibilities. While ...
Recent custody decisions in the United States have treated paid in-home caretakers as substitutes fo...
This Commentary remarks on the work of Fineman and Williams, particularly their contributions to thi...
Ertman responds to McClain\u27s suggestion that we should alter our understandings of care for child...
I begin this Article with the preceding two statements concerning care for children because they foc...
The problem of combining work and family life is perhaps the central challenge for the contemporary ...
Contemporary social policy relating to women\u27s employment remains strikingly ambivalent. Those in...
This thesis seeks to address how kinship care can produce higher permanency outcomes for children. B...
An increasing number of children are being cared for exclusively by grandparents or extended family....