Child support cases increasingly involve parents who were unmarried at the time of their child’s birth and parents who have had children with multiple partners.
![Report Icon](/wp//wp-content/uploads/2018/03/09-Institute-for-Research-on-Poverty-Icons-Reports.png)
Explaining the Patterns of Child Support among Unmarried Low-Income Noncustodial Fathers in Chicago, Milwaukee and New York
- Katherine A. Magnuson
- Report
- February 2006
![Report Icon](/wp//wp-content/uploads/2018/03/09-Institute-for-Research-on-Poverty-Icons-Reports.png)
Mothers’ Family Networks and Livelihood in the Context of Child Support Enforcement Policy
- Jane Collins and Victoria Mayer
- Report
- January 2006
![Discussion Paper Icon](/wp//wp-content/uploads/2018/03/04-Institute-for-Research-on-Poverty-Icons-Discussion-Papers.png)
Multiple-Partner Fertility: Incidence and Implications for Child Support Policy
- Daniel R. Meyer, Maria Cancian, and Steven T. Cook
- Discussion Paper
- August 2004
![Report Icon](/wp//wp-content/uploads/2018/03/09-Institute-for-Research-on-Poverty-Icons-Reports.png)
Child Support Orders and Payments: Do Lower Orders Result in Higher Payments?
- Mei-Chen Hu and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- March 2003
![Report Icon](/wp//wp-content/uploads/2018/03/09-Institute-for-Research-on-Poverty-Icons-Reports.png)
Children’s Living Arrangements in Divorced Wisconsin Families with Shared Placement
- M. L. Krecker, P. Brown, M. S. Melli, and L. Wimer
- Report
- June 2003