Child support order and payment amounts have implications for the economic well-being of noncustodial parents, custodial parents, and children. Most noncustodial parents with a child support order pay part, but not the full amount of that order; likewise, most custodial parents who are owed child support receive some support, but not the full amount they are owed.

The Compliance of New Wisconsin Child Support Orders with the Wisconsin Guideline: Pre- and Post-2004with the Wisconsin Guideline: Pre- and Post-2004
- Ingrid Rothe, Jennifer Noyes, Lynn Wimer, and Anat Yom-Tov
- Report
- July 2007

The Regularity of Child Support and Its Contribution to the Regularity of Income
- Yoonsook Ha, Daniel R. Meyer, and Maria Cancian
- Report
- April 2007

Wisconsin’s 2004 Shared-Physical-Placement Guidelines: Their Use and Implications in Divorce Cases
- Patricia Brown and Maria Cancian
- Report
- March 2007

Characteristics of Shared-Placement Child Support Formulas Used in the Fifty States
- Patricia Brown and Tonya Brito
- Report
- March 2007

Review of Child Support Policies for Incarcerated Payers
- Jennifer L. Noyes
- Report
- December 2006

The Stability of Child Support Orders
- Yoonsook Ha, Daniel R. Meyer, and Maria Cancian
- Report
- December 2006

Alternative Approaches to Child Support Policy in the Context of Multiple-Partner Fertility
- Maria Cancian and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- December 2006

Comparisons of Outcomes
- Steven T. Cook and Emma Caspar
- Report
- December 2006

The Experiences of American Indians in Wisconsin in the Child Support Demonstration Evaluation
- Steven T. Cook
- Report
- December 2006

Review of Child Support Policies for Multiple Family Obligations: Five Case Studies
- Emma Caspar
- Report
- September 2006