States are required to establish and enforce child support orders. Parents who fail to pay ordered child support amounts are subject to various sanctions, which may include fines, driver’s license suspension, or incarceration.

New Research on the Child Support Landscape in Wisconsin
- Jooyoung Kong, Lisa Klein Vogel, and Tova Walsh
- Webinar
- January 11 2023

The COVID-19 Pandemic and Child Support Enforcement
- Lisa Klein Vogel, Alejandra Ros Pilarz, Laura Cuesta, and Genevieve Caffrey
- Report
- August 2021

Angela Guarin: Do Low-Income Noncustodial Fathers “Trade” Earlier Families for New Ones?
- Angela Guarin
- Podcasts
- February 13 2020

Use of Enforcement Actions and Their Relationship to Payments
- Daniel R. Meyer, Maria Cancian, and Melody Waring
- Report
- November 2019

Satisfaction with Child Support Agency Services and Its Relationship to Child Support Payments
- Daniel R. Meyer, Yoona Kim, and Maria Cancian
- Report
- October 2019

Child Support Enforcement Tools and Their Relationship to Payments: A Review of County Policy and Practice
- Lisa Klein Vogel
- Report
- September 2019

Challenges and Opportunities for Engaging Noncustodial Parents in Employment and Other Services
- Lisa Klein Vogel
- Report
- September 2019

Culture change: Implementing a new approach to child support
- Jennifer L. Noyes, Lisa Klein Vogel, and Lanikque Howard
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- July 2019

Can a redesigned child support system do better?
- Maria Cancian, Daniel R. Meyer, and Robert G. Wood
- Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
- July 2019

Comparison of CSPED Participants to National and State Child Support Caseloads
- Leslie Hodges
- Discussion Paper
- June 2019