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Child Support Enforcement and Domestic Violence Angela Fertig Irwin Garfinkel Sara McLanahan Prepared for the Fragile Families Summer Data Workshop 2004
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Question Does stricter child support enforcement increase domestic violence among non-cohabiting couples? Stricter CSE Father ’ s contact and stress Mother ’ s bargaining power
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CSE also affects fertility and cohabitation decisions, e.g. If M ’ s incentive dominates, more non-cohabiting couples in strict CSE states In strict states, bigger and “ better ” pool of non-cohabiting Fs Selection Bias Stricter CSE M has incentive to not cohabit F has incentive to cohabit “ bad ” cohabiting not cohabiting Strict CSE “ good ”
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What makes Fragile Families ideal? Sample of non-cohabiting mothers from different states Rich set of variables: Violence Child support (effect should differ by status) Welfare (effect should differ by status) Unique controls (like father ’ s jail time) Baseline father characteristics to control for selection into non-cohabiting sample (Like father ’ s commitment)
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Sample All mothers at baseline: 4898 All mothers at follow-up: 4365 Married: 1275 Cohabiting: 1264 Not cohabiting: 1800 Non-cohabiting mothers who were romantic at baseline or follow-up 1120
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Prevalence: Violence, Order, Welfare
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Means: Demographic Controls
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Means: More controls
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Selection Controls: Father ’ s commitment
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Results: CSE increases violence Seriously Hurt after the birth Hit/Slap after the birth CSE.004 (.003).006* (.003).008* (.004).014** (.005) selection controls XX N10901071 1053
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