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The Forms and Functions of Child Support Stigma

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posted on 2024-07-11, 14:25 authored by Zoe GoodallZoe Goodall, Kay CookKay Cook
The stigmatization of single mothers who receive child support proliferates in news media, policy, and popular culture. Drawing on critical stigma literature, we examined data from interviews conducted with child support recipients in Australia and the United Kingdom. Our analysis examined how women receiving child support experienced stigma, how stigma was applied to other women in similar situations, and the political implications of these framings. Our interview data suggested child support stigma can be grouped into three categories, where women were seen to contravene maternal norms, patriarchal norms, and/or familial norms. These norms sanctioned mothers’ use of, amount of, and reliance on child support, viewing it fundamentally as men’s money that women take, rather than the contribution of a nonresident parent to their children’s upbringing. The source of stigma may have been ex-partners, child support bureaucratic systems, or recipients themselves, but the social and political functions of child support stigma remained the same: it discouraged solidarity between recipients and encouraged policy reform that further disadvantaged them.

Funding

Women’s access to child support

Australian Research Council

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

2329-4973

Journal title

Social Currents

Volume

8

Issue

2

Article number

232949652096821

Pagination

17 pp

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2020 the authors. This final peer-reviewed accepted manuscript is distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0). https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Language

eng

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