While most mothers with child-support orders receive support, the amount they receive varies substantially, the researchers find upon examining the situations of 14,729 Wisconsin mothers with new child support orders in 2000. Drawing on data from 2001-2003, this study finds that variation in child-support income varies year to year and within a year. More than one-third of families experienced declines or increases of $1,000 or more in support from one year to the next
The increased frequency of divorce, separation, and nonmarital childbearing over the past several de...
This brief identifies gaps in support services among foster parents using data from a nationally rep...
A strong rationale for updating child support guidelines arises from changes over time in the measur...
We use data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to examine trends in the receipt of child suppor...
From 1970 to 1981, the number of divorces in the United States more than doubled, and the number of ...
This paper examines five-year compliance patterns among Wisconsin child support cases that came to c...
The Institute's Discussion Paper series is designed to describe, and to elicit comments on, wor...
This study examines the extent to which children enjoy regular contact and financial support from th...
on Poverty, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Any opinions and conclusions are those of the authors a...
Previous research has found that child support receipts deter mothers' labor supply less than does o...
States\u27 child support award guidelines adopted under the 1984 Child Support Enforcement Amendment...
The Child Support Guidelines, incentivized by federal law, provide rebuttable guidance for setting c...
thank Jerry Hage and Harriet Presser for comments on an earlier version of this paper; the authors r...
Using a more comprehensive accounting than previous studies, we examined the economi...
Many children born to mothers who are not married are very poor, and in many instances their mothers...
The increased frequency of divorce, separation, and nonmarital childbearing over the past several de...
This brief identifies gaps in support services among foster parents using data from a nationally rep...
A strong rationale for updating child support guidelines arises from changes over time in the measur...
We use data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to examine trends in the receipt of child suppor...
From 1970 to 1981, the number of divorces in the United States more than doubled, and the number of ...
This paper examines five-year compliance patterns among Wisconsin child support cases that came to c...
The Institute's Discussion Paper series is designed to describe, and to elicit comments on, wor...
This study examines the extent to which children enjoy regular contact and financial support from th...
on Poverty, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Any opinions and conclusions are those of the authors a...
Previous research has found that child support receipts deter mothers' labor supply less than does o...
States\u27 child support award guidelines adopted under the 1984 Child Support Enforcement Amendment...
The Child Support Guidelines, incentivized by federal law, provide rebuttable guidance for setting c...
thank Jerry Hage and Harriet Presser for comments on an earlier version of this paper; the authors r...
Using a more comprehensive accounting than previous studies, we examined the economi...
Many children born to mothers who are not married are very poor, and in many instances their mothers...
The increased frequency of divorce, separation, and nonmarital childbearing over the past several de...
This brief identifies gaps in support services among foster parents using data from a nationally rep...
A strong rationale for updating child support guidelines arises from changes over time in the measur...