urban institute nonprofit social and economic policy research

View Research by Author - Ariel Halpern

Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/ArielHalpern


Viewing 1-6 of 6. Most recent posts listed first.

Child Support Enforcement Is Working Better Than We Think (Policy Briefs/ANF:Issues and Options for States)
Elaine Sorensen, Ariel Halpern

While the proportion of single mothers who receive child support remains largely unchanged since 1976, changes in child support enforcement have significantly improved collection efforts. A dramatic increase in the number of never-married mothers masks this progress. This brief reveals a four-fold increase in the child support receipt rate among never-married

Posted to Web: April 15, 2000Publication Date: April 15, 2000

Redirecting Welfare Policy Toward Building Strong Families (Policy Briefs/Strengthening Families)
Elaine Sorensen, Ariel Halpern, Ronald B. Mincy

This brief argues that welfare reform has not gone far enough to encourage two-parent families and responsible fatherhood. In fact, some of its own policies discourage this behavior. Furthermore, many poor families with young children are already struggling to stay together against the odds. Eventually, the majority of these families break up. By intervening early, government could help these "fragile families" scale the most common barriers to remaining intact over the long haul.

Posted to Web: March 01, 2000Publication Date: March 01, 2000

Child Support Enforcement: How Well Is It Doing? (Discussion Papers)
Elaine Sorensen, Ariel Halpern

This paper finds that several tools of the child support enforcement system - the $50 pass-through, the tax intercept program, and presumptive guidelines - had a significantly positive effect on child support receipt among both never-married and previously married single mothers. Immediate wage withholding also had a significantly positive impact on child support among previously married mothers on AFDC. The in-hospital paternity establishment program had a significantly positive effect on child support among never-married mothers not on AFDC. This paper examines 21 years of data from the Current Population Survey supplemented with detailed information on state child support policies.

Posted to Web: December 01, 1999Publication Date: December 01, 1999

Poverty among Children Born Outside of Marriage: Preliminary Findings from the National Survey of America's Families (Discussion Papers)
Ariel Halpern

Among children living with single mothers, those born outside of marriage are 1.7 times more likely to be poor than are those born to married parents, even after controlling for differences in such factors as mother's education and work status. As such, a continued policy focus on children born to unmarried mothers is warranted.

Posted to Web: December 01, 1999Publication Date: December 01, 1999

Children's Environment and Behavior: Family Structure (Series/Snapshots of America's Families)
Ariel Halpern, Leticia Fernandez, Rebecca L. Clark

Most American children live in two-parent families, whether biological or adoptive. Many children, however, do not live with both of their biological parents. Divorce and separation, births outside of marriage, remarriages, and child abuse or neglect are among the reasons these children spend at least part of their childhood with only one or neither biological parent.

Posted to Web: January 01, 1999Publication Date: January 01, 1999

Children's Environment and Behavior: Children Born Outside of Marriage (Series/Snapshots of America's Families)
Ariel Halpern, Elaine Sorensen

Between 1978 and 1996, the number of babies born to unmarried women doubled, from just over 500,000 to over 1.2 million. Although this dramatic rate of increase has slowed in recent years, 32 percent of all U.S. births are still to unmarried women. These children are more likely to be poor than children born to married women.

Posted to Web: January 01, 1999Publication Date: January 01, 1999

 

Return to list of authors

Email this Page