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Family, State and Child Well-Being

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Family, State and Child Well-Being
Author(s)McLanahan, Sara
AbstractIn order to assess the full impact of these changes in the family and the state, sociologists need answers to several questions. First, they need to know more about the capabilities of the men and women who bear children outside marriage, especially the fathers. Second, they need a better understanding of the relationship between unwed parents and between parents and children. And third, they need to understand how welfare and child support policies affect parents’ relationships and ultimately children’s well-being.
IssueNo
Pages703-706
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAnnual Review of Sociology
VolumeNo26
PubDateAnnual 2000
ISBN_ISSN0360-0572

Family and Kinship

  • Ascription and Social Identity
  • Capitalism / Westernization
  • Child-Bearing
  • Comparative Kinship
  • Demographic Trends and Policy
  • Domestic Violence
  • Evolution of the Family / Family Structure
  • Family, Race, and Nation
  • Gender Inequality
  • Gender, Work, and Family
  • Globalization
  • Marriage
  • Modernization and Family Change
  • Social Context / Social Policy
  • Well-Being and Family


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