The child support enforcement system plays a critical role in facilitating private income transfers from noncustodial parents to their nonresident children. It also functions as a cost-recovery mechanism for government expenditures on these children. The program serves a majority of custodial families and transfers a substantial amount of support. Moreover, child support receipt has been credited with considerably reducing poverty.
New Research on the Child Support Landscape in Wisconsin
- Jooyoung Kong, Lisa Klein Vogel, and Tova Walsh
- Webinar
- January 11 2023
Associations Between Problematic Substance Use and Child Support Order Compliance
- Tawandra L. Rowell-Cunsolo, Diandian Yilin, Amit S. Jadhav, and Carson Borbely
- Report
- October 2022
COVID-19, Child Support, and the Income Packages of Custodial Parents
- Alejandra Ros Pilarz and Laura Cuesta
- Report
- October 2022
Child Support Agencies as Connectors
- Lisa Klein Vogel and Samina Hossain
- Report
- August 2022
Exploring the Long-Term Effects of Child Support
- Jooyoung Kong, Maria Cancian, Daniel R. Meyer, and Quentin Riser
- Report
- June 2022
The Wisconsin Approach to Developing Administrative Data Resources for Research & Evaluation
- Hilary Shager, Steven Cook, Kristina Trastek, Marah A. Curtis, and Lawrence Berger
- Webinar
- May 11 2022
COVID-19 and Low-Income Noncustodial Fathers
- Tova Walsh, Michael Hoffmeister, Laura Zimmerman, and Sarah Meier
- Report
- May 2022
How to Better Serve Families Involved in the Criminal Justice System
- Julie Poehlmann-Tynan, Pajarita Charles, and Kalvin Barrett
- Webinar
- September 15 2021
Who Is Not Paying Child Support?
- Maria Cancian, Yoona Kim, and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- September 2021
Shared Placement in Paternity Cases: An Initial Look
- Molly A. Costanzo and Aaron Reilly
- Report
- September 2021