Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2017
Publication Information
35 Law & Ineq. 199 (2017)
Abstract
While divorcing couples in the United States have been studied for many years, separating unmarried couples and their children have proven more difficult to analyze. Recently there have been successful longitudinal ethnographic and survey-based studies. This piece uses documents from a single Indiana county’s unified family court (called the Probate Court) to trace the effects of race and gender on unmarried families, beginning with a sample of 386 children for whom paternity petitions were brought in four months of 2008. It confirms prior theoretical work on racial differences in noncustodial parenting and poses new questions about how incarceration and gender affect low income families.
Recommended Citation
Margaret Brinig,
Racial and Gender Justice in the Child Welfare and Child Support Systems,
35 Law & Ineq. 199 (2017).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/law_faculty_scholarship/1313
Included in
Family Law Commons, Juvenile Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, Law and Society Commons, Social Welfare Law Commons