Family & Partnering

Family life and economic status are closely intertwined. Fertility, family formation, family structure, parental relationship dissolution, multiple-partner fertility, and family complexity patterns vary by socioeconomic status, as do parenting behaviors and the quality of children’s home environments. The family contexts in which children are born and raised are, in turn, associated with their own economic and social well-being throughout their lives.

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Does Foster Care Lower School Achievement?

  • Lawrence Berger, Maria Cancian, Jennifer Noyes, and Vanessa Rios-Salas 
  • Fast Focus Policy Brief
  • October 2015
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Family Complexity, Inequality, and Public Policy

  • Daniel Meyer
  • Podcasts
  • August 2015
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How school quality affects the success of a conditional cash transfer program

  • Sharon Wolf, J. Lawrence Aber, and Pamela A. Morris
  • Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
  • Fall/Winter (2014–2015) 2015
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Roles and Resources in Complex Families

  • Lawrence Berger
  • Podcasts
  • October 2014
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Building human capital and economic potential

  • Carolyn J. Heinrich and Timothy M. Smeeding
  • Fast Focus Policy Brief
  • September 2014
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Building Economic Self-Sufficiency

  • Carolyn Heinrich and Timothy Smeeding
  • Fast Focus Policy Brief
  • September 2014
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Helping the Hard-to-Employ and Their Families

  • Carolyn Heinrich and Timothy Smeeding
  • Fast Focus Policy Brief
  • September 2014
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The social contexts of adolescent romantic relationships

  • Lloyd Grieger, Yasamin Kusunoki, and David J. Harding
  • Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
  • Spring/Summer 2014