Multiple-Partner Fertility

Multiple-partner fertility occurs when parents have biological children with more than one partner.

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Do low-income noncustodial fathers “trade” earlier families for newer ones?

  • Lawrence M. Berger, Maria Cancian, Angela Guarin, and Daniel R. Meyer
  • Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
  • July 2019
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Final Impact Findings from the Child Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED)

  • Maria Cancian, Daniel R. Meyer, and Robert G. Wood
  • Report
  • March 2019
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Final Impact Findings from the Child Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED): Technical Supplement

  • Maria Cancian, Daniel R. Meyer, Lawrence M. Berger, Angela Guarin , Leslie Hodges, Katherine Anne Magnuson, Lisa Klein Vogel, Melody Waring, Robert G. Wood, Quinn Moore, and April Yanyuan Wu
  • Report
  • March 2019
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Single-Parent-Family policy

  • Maria Cancian and Daniel R. Meyer
  • Focus on Poverty & Classroom Supplement
  • Special Issue 2017
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Changes in the Incidence of Complex Families and the Implications for Child Support Orders

  • Maria Cancian, Daniel R. Meyer, and Steven T. Cook
  • Report
  • December 2017
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Which Families Are Poor and Why?

  • Poverty Fact Sheet
  • September 2016
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The Mismatch between Family Law and Nonmarital Families

  • Clare Huntington
  • Podcasts
  • November 2015
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Family Complexity, Inequality, and Public Policy

  • Daniel Meyer
  • Podcasts
  • August 2015
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Roles and Resources in Complex Families

  • Lawrence Berger
  • Podcasts
  • October 2014